| Literature DB >> 33891148 |
Laurence Crivelli1, Anne-Elodie Millischer2, Pascale Sonigo2, David Grévent2, Sylviane Hanquinet3, Yvan Vial4, Leonor Alamo5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Screening ultrasound (US) has increased the detection of congenital vascular anomalies in utero. Complementary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may improve the diagnosis, but its real utility is still not well established.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital hemangiomas; Fetus; Lymphatic malformations; Magnetic resonance imaging; Prenatal diagnosis; Ultrasound; Vascular anomalies
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33891148 PMCID: PMC8363547 DOI: 10.1007/s00247-021-05031-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Radiol ISSN: 0301-0449
International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies classification of congenital vascular pathologies (adapted from [10])
| Tumors | Malformations | |
|---|---|---|
| Simple | Combined malformations | |
| RICH | Capillary malformations | Capillary-venous |
| Capillary-lymphatic | ||
| NICH | Lymphatic malformations | Lymphatic-venous |
| Capillary-lymphatic-venous | ||
| PICH | Venous malformations | Capillary-arterial-venous |
| Arteriovenous malformations | Capillary-lymphatic-arterial-venous | |
NICH non-involuting congenital hemangioma, PICH partially involuting hemangioma, RICH rapidly involuting congenital hemangioma
Magnetic resonance systems and protocols of fetal magnetic resonance imaging used in the three university hospitals
| Brand | Model | Sequences | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lausanne, Switzerland | Siemens Healthineers (Erlangen, Germany) | Magnetom Symphony | In the 3 fetal planes: |
| Aera | T2 half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin echo (HASTE) | ||
| T2 true fast imaging with steady-state precession (FISP) | |||
| T1-weighted volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination | |||
| Geneva, Switzerland | Siemens Healthineers | Avanto | T2 HASTE coronal |
| T2 true FISP sagittal | |||
| 2-dimensional T1-weighted spoiled incoherent gradient echo sequence axial | |||
| Paris, France | GE Healthcare (Waukesha, WI) | Optima MR450w | In the 3 fetal planes: |
| Fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition (FIESTA) | |||
| Single-shot fast spin echo | |||
| 3-dimensional spoiled gradient echo pulse sequence |
Data of the patients with congenital lymphatic malformations included in this series: gender, anatomical location, prenatal suggested diagnosis, final diagnosis and clinical outcome
| N | Gender | Anatomical location | US diagnosis | MRI diagnosis | Concordance US/MRI | Imaging findings and complications | Final diagnosis | Concordance pre-/postnatal | Final outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | Left face superficial | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 2 | F | Left face superficial | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 3 | M | Left face + neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Alive |
| - Tongue infiltration, tracheal compression, supra-aortic vessels encasement | |||||||||
| 4 | M | Left face + neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Slightly heterogenous fluid content | Microcystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 5 | F | Face + neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 6 | M | Face + neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Microcystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 7 | M | Neck superficial | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Unknown |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 8 | M | Neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Microcystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 9 | M | Supra-hyoid neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Pregnancy termination |
| - Tongue infiltration, oropharynx displacement, jugulo-carotid vessels entrapment | |||||||||
| 10 | M | Right neck superficial | LM | LM | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 11 | F | Right neck + thorax | LM | LM | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - Infiltration of the thoracic wall and lung | |||||||||
| 12 | M | Left neck + thorax | LM | LM | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - Jugulo-carotid vessels encasement | |||||||||
| - Trachea displacement | |||||||||
| 13 | M | Right face + neck + thorax | LM | LM | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Death at birth |
| - Tracheal compression and right lung invasion | |||||||||
| - Bilateral pleural effusions | |||||||||
| 14 | M | Right face + neck | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Pregnancy termination |
| - Oropharynx extension | |||||||||
| - Tongue invasion | |||||||||
| 15 | M | Right axilla | LM | LM | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content | Mixed LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 16 | F | Left thorax subcutaneous | LM | LM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 17 | F | Right thorax | CPAM | CPAM | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | No | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 18 | M | Abdomen intraperitoneal | Fetal peritonitis | LM | No | - Homogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | Yes | Alive |
| - Mass effect without obstruction | |||||||||
| 19 | M | Abdomen retroperitoneal | Teratoma | Teratoma | Yes | - Heterogenous fluid content, solid aspect | Macrocystic LM | No | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect | |||||||||
| 20 | M | Pelvis presacral | Teratoma | Teratoma | Yes | - Homogenous fluid content | Macrocystic LM | No | Alive |
| - No significant mass effect |
CPAM congenital pulmonary airway malformation, LM lymphatic malformation, Mixed macro- and microcystic lesion, N patient number
Data of the patients with congenital hemangioma included in this series: gender, anatomical location, prenatal suggested diagnosis, final diagnosis and clinical outcome
| N | Gender | Anatomical location | US diagnosis | MRI diagnosis | Imaging findings and complications | Concordance US/MRI | Final diagnosis | Concordance pre-/postnatal | Final outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | M | Left scalp | Teratoma | Teratoma | - Heterogenous | Yes | Scalp hemangioma | No | Alive |
| - No cardiovascular impact | |||||||||
| 22 | M | Left hepatic lobe | Mesenteric teratoma | Mesenteric teratoma | - Heterogeneous | Yes | Hepatic hemangioma | No | Alive |
| - Hypervascular | |||||||||
| - Enlarged left hepatic vein | |||||||||
| - Cardiac failure | |||||||||
| 23 | F | Left hepatic lobe | Hepatic hamartoma | Hepatic hamartoma | - Very heterogenous | Yes | Hepatic hemangioma | No | Death at birth |
| - Central cystic areas | |||||||||
| - Cardiac failure | |||||||||
| - Hydrops fetalis | |||||||||
| - Bilateral lung hypoplasia | |||||||||
| 24 | M | Left hepatic lobe | Hepatic hemangioma | Hepatic hemangioma | - Heterogeneous | Yes | Hepatic hemangioma | Yes | Alive |
| - Hypervascular | |||||||||
| - Enlarged left hepatic vein | |||||||||
| - Cardiac failure |
N patient number
Fig. 1A male fetus at 26 weeks’ gestation with presacral lymphatic malformation (N20, Table 3). a–c Coronal oblique (a), sagittal paramedian (b) and axial (c) T2-weighted MR images (repetition time/echo time 1,200/90 ms) show the presacral fluid isointense lesion (arrows) with an internal septum. The prenatally suggested diagnosis was a presacral teratoma, based not only on imaging findings but also the typical anatomical location of this common congenital tumor. Pathology after postnatal surgery identified a macrocystic lymphatic malformation
Fig. 2A male fetus at 35 weeks’ gestation with extensive mesenteric malformation and postnatal surgery at 4 months old (N18, Table 3). a–d Axial US (a) and T2-weighted MR (b) images (repetition time [TR]/echo time [TE] 1,200/90 ms) at the same level and coronal T2- (c) (TR/TE 1,200/90 ms) and T1-weighted (d) (TR/TE 3.29/1.29 ms) MR images show the extensive mesenteric macrocystic lymphatic malformation with homogenous liquid echogenicity and signal intensity and multiple internal septations. The lesion displaces the fetal intraperitoneal organs but shows no significant complication. The fetal colon, surrounded by the lymphatic malformation, is easily identifiable by its meconium filling, hypointense on T2- and hyperintense on T1-weighted images (arrows). The lesion was correctly identified only at MRI. e Postnatal image during the surgical procedure shows the voluminous lesion surrounding the colon
Fig. 3Cervical lymphatic malformations in a female fetus. a A coronal T2-weighted MR image (repetition time [TR]/echo time [TE] 6.38/3.19 ms) at 36 weeks’ gestation (N11, Tables 3 and 5) shows the voluminous macrocystic lymphatic malformation with heterogeneous signal intensity after intralesional hemorrhage. The cervical mass extends into the axilla and the thoracic and abdominal wall without invading the fetal organs. Note the normal diameter of the trachea and the main bronchi (arrows) and the huge abduction of the fetal arm. b In opposite, the midline sagittal T2-weighted image (TR/TE 1,200/89 ms) at 35 weeks’ gestation (N3, Tables 3 and 5) shows the anterior cervical lymphatic micro- and macrocystic malformation, extending into the submental space without invading the tongue. Note the resulting compression of the larynx and the trachea (arrows). An ex utero intrapartum treatment was performed at birth
Additional information provided by late pregnancy MRI exams in patients with lymphatic malformations
| N | Location | Time of MRI (weeks of pregnancy) | Additional information at 2nd MRI | Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Left face + neck | 32/35 | - Major volume augmentation without hemorrhage | - EXIT procedure |
| - Emergency cesarean at 36 weeks of pregnancy | ||||
| - Oropharynx distortion | ||||
| - Increasing tracheal compression | ||||
| 5 | Face + neck | 26/34 | - No significant tracheal displacement | - Normal birth |
| - No hemorrhage | ||||
| 11 | Right neck + thorax | 25/36 | - Major volume augmentation due to hemorrhage | - No need of EXIT |
| - Elective cesarean at 37 weeks of pregnancy | ||||
| - Slight lateral tracheal displacement | - Immediate intubation | |||
| - Extreme arm abduction | ||||
| 12 | Left neck + thorax | 22/34 | - Mediastinal extension | - No need of EXIT |
| - Slight tracheal displacement | - Elective cesarean at 39 weeks of pregnancy | |||
| - No hemorrhage | - Immediate intubation | |||
| 18 | Abdomen intraperitoneal | 26/35 | - Major volume augmentation without hemorrhage | - Elective cesarean at 38 weeks of pregnancy |
| - Increasing abdominal distention | - Surgical excision at 2 months of age | |||
| - No intestinal obstruction |
EXIT ex utero intrapartum treatment, N patient number
Fig. 4A male fetus at 33 weeks’ gestation (N22) with hepatic hemangioma and postnatal images at 4 days old. a Transverse US image shows a voluminous, solid appearing, heterogeneous left hepatic mass. Arrows indicate the borders of the lesion. S spleen, St stomach. b–d Axial Doppler US image (b), coronal T2-weighted (c) (repetition time [TR]/echo time [TE] 1,000/92 ms) image at the same level as well as axial T2-weighted (d) MR image (TR/TE 6.60/3.30 ms) show the inhomogeneous, exophytic growing lesion arising from the left hepatic lobe (H in b, arrowheads in c, d). Note the numerous tubular forming flow voids indicating vascular structures (arrow in d) and the extreme enlarged left hepatic vein (arrow in b). e Postnatal T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE 3.61/1.61 ms) after contrast shows the marked early peripheral enhancement of the lesion at the arterial phase and confirms the enlarged left hepatic vein (arrow). After significant regression, the tumor was resected when the boy was 18 months old
Fig. 5A male fetus at 27 weeks’ gestation with hepatic hemangioma (N23). a–b Coronal (a) and left sagittal (b) T2-weighted MR images (repetition time/echo time 1,530/86 ms) show a huge, heterogeneous left abdominal mass arising from the left hepatic lobe. Note the absence of tubular intralesional structures. Arrowheads show the borders of the lesion. The tumor causes bilateral elevation of the hemidiaphragms and severe secondary lung hypoplasia, fetal cardiomegaly and marked hydrops fetalis. The patient died at birth after an emergency cesarean at the 27th week of pregnancy. c Macroscopic view of the fetal liver confirms the hepatic origin of this tumor and reveals central cavities and extensive necrosis