| Literature DB >> 35281485 |
Luis R Carrete1, Jacob S Young2, Soonmee Cha3.
Abstract
Management of gliomas following initial diagnosis requires thoughtful presurgical planning followed by regular imaging to monitor treatment response and survey for new tumor growth. Traditional MR imaging modalities such as T1 post-contrast and T2-weighted sequences have long been a staple of tumor diagnosis, surgical planning, and post-treatment surveillance. While these sequences remain integral in the management of gliomas, advances in imaging techniques have allowed for a more detailed characterization of tumor characteristics. Advanced MR sequences such as perfusion, diffusion, and susceptibility weighted imaging, as well as PET scans have emerged as valuable tools to inform clinical decision making and provide a non-invasive way to help distinguish between tumor recurrence and pseudoprogression. Furthermore, these advances in imaging have extended to the operating room and assist in making surgical resections safer. Nevertheless, surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation treatment continue to make the interpretation of MR changes difficult for glioma patients. As analytics and machine learning techniques improve, radiomics offers the potential to be more quantitative and personalized in the interpretation of imaging data for gliomas. In this review, we describe the role of these newer imaging modalities during the different stages of management for patients with gliomas, focusing on the pre-operative, post-operative, and surveillance periods. Finally, we discuss radiomics as a means of promoting personalized patient care in the future.Entities:
Keywords: PET scanning; glioma; imaging; progression; pseudoprogression; radiomics; recurrence
Year: 2022 PMID: 35281485 PMCID: PMC8904563 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.787755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Imaging techniques for glioma imaging, utility, and limitations.
| MRI technique | Clinical utility and findings |
|
| |
| T1 | Anatomic MRI- evaluates tissue architecture |
| Pre-contrast | Hyperintensity from fat, blood products, mineralization |
| Post-contrast | Demonstrates non-specific BBB breakdown |
| T2/FLAIR | Anatomic MRI- evaluates tissue architecture |
| Hyperintensity in peritumoral edema, non-enhancing tumor, gliosis, white matter injury | |
| DWI | Evaluates Brownian motion/diffusion of water molecules, can be presented as an ADC map |
| Reduced diffusion (high signal intensity) in areas of increased cellularity due to tumor and in cytotoxic edema or postoperative injury | |
| SWI | Sensitive to magnetic susceptibility of tissues |
| Hypointense appearance from blood products, hyperintense appearance from calcification | |
| MRS | Evaluate tumor biochemical/metabolic profile |
| HGGs show higher Cho/NAA and Cho/Cr ratios than LGGs | |
|
| |
| DSC | Main metric is cerebral blood volume |
| High blood volume suggestive of higher tumor grade or tumor recurrence | |
| DCE | Main metric is ktrans, a measure of permeability |
| High permeability suggests higher tumor grade | |
| ASL | Main metric is cerebral blood flow |
| High blood flow suggestive of higher-grade tumor. Does not require exogenous contrast. | |
| PET | Investigates tumor rates of proliferation and metabolism using molecular tracers |
| FDG PET | Compares rates of tumor uptake of glucose metabolism relative to surrounding tissue; higher rates of glucose metabolism seen in higher tumor grades |
| AA PET | Compares rates of amino acid transport in tumors relative to surrounding brain tissue; higher rates of amino acid tracer metabolism indicative of higher tumor grade. |
|
| |
| DTI | Examines the direction of diffusivity of water molecules along white matter tracts. |
| Tractography demonstrates location of white matter tracts relative to infiltrative tumor to inform pre- and intra-operative planning | |
| fMRI | Evaluate brain activation based on specific tasks based on regional changes in blood oxygenation levels |
| Used for functional mapping of specific brain regions to help preserve areas critical to perform certain tasks by is limited by poor sensitivity and specificity and overall poor correlation with intraoperative direct electrical stimulation mapping | |
| MEG | Detects magnetic fields generated by electrical currents from neuronal action potentials |
| Registered with 3D MRI sequence to visualize functional neuronal activity | |
| nTMS | Utilizes transcranial magnetic fields to non-invasively stimulate/inhibit brain cortex |
| Transcranial magnetic fields applied through non-invasive image-guided method to generate functional maps to differentiate eloquent from non-eloquent cortex. | |
HGG, high-grade glioma; LGG, low-grade glioma; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; FLAIR, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; BBB, blood-brain barrier; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; SWI, susceptibility-weighted imaging; DSC, dynamic susceptibility contrast; DCE, dynamic contrast enhanced; ASL, arterial spin labeling; MRS, MR spectroscopy; DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; fMRI, functional MRI; MEG, magnetoencephalography; nTMS, navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation; PET, positron emission tomography; FDG PET, 2-
FIGURE 1Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype. (A) Axial CT without contrast: Ill-defined hypodensity lesion centered in the left superior temporal gyrus; (B) axial DWI: No associated reduced diffusion; (C) axial T1 pre-contrast: hypointense mass; (D) coronal T2: heterogeneous mass with hypointense rim with prominent central necrosis (yellow arrow); (E) axial T2: heterogeneous mass with hypointense rim with prominent central necrosis (yellow arrow); (F) axial SWI: prominent blood products within the mass (black arrow); (G) axial ASL perfusion: marked hyperperfusion (black arrows) within the rim enhancing component of the mass; (H) axial T1 post-contrast: heterogeneous mass with thick rim enhancement (yellow arrows) and prominent central necrosis; (I) coronal T1 post-contrast: heterogeneous mass with thick rim enhancement and prominent central necrosis; (J) sagittal T1 post-contrast: heterogeneous mass with thick rim enhancement and prominent central necrosis. CT, Computed tomography; DWI, Diffusion-weighted imaging; SWI, Susceptibility-weighted imaging; ASL, Arterial spin labeling; MRS, Magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
FIGURE 2T2/FLAIR mismatch. (A) Axial T2: homogenously hyperintense mass (yellow arrow). (B) Axial FLAIR: hypointense mass (yellow arrow) relative to T2 image with exception of a hyperintense peripheral rim (white arrow).
FIGURE 3Diffuse astrocytoma, IDH-wildtype. (A) Axial T1 pre-contrast: expansile hypointense left insular mass; (B) Axial T1 post-contrast: No associated enhancement; (C) axial FLAIR: heterogeneous mixed hyper- and hypointense signal intensity within the mass; (D) axial T2: homogeneous hyperintense mass; (E) axial FLAIR: hyperintense region of the tumor (white arrow) in the posterior aspect; (F) axial DWI: associated reduced diffusion in the posterior tumor (white arrow); (G) axial T2: localizer for single voxel MRS targeted to the posterior tumor; (H) proton MRS single voxel: pathologic increase in choline metabolite at 3.2 ppm (yellow arrow) and absent NAA metabolite (arrowhead) at 2 ppm consistent with proliferating process. Biopsy targeted to this region showed cellular astrocytoma. FLAIR, Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery.
FIGURE 4MR perfusion sequences. (A) Axial DSC perfusion: Marked hyperperfusion within the lateral and posterior aspects of the mass (black arrows); (B) axial DCE perfusion: Marked capillary leakiness within the central aspect of the mass (arrowheads); (C) axial ASL perfusion: Marked hyperperfusion of a neoplasm in the frontal lobe. DSC, Dynamic susceptibility-weighted contrast-enhanced; DCE, Dynamic contrast enhanced; ASL, Arterial spin labeling.
FIGURE 5Molecular glioblastoma. (A) Axial FLAIR: homogeneously hyperintense mass; (B) axial T1 post-contrast: mild enhancement within the mass without distinct area of necrosis; (C) axial DSC perfusion: marked hyperperfusion within the lateral and posterior aspects of the mass (black arrows); (D) axial DCE perfusion: marked capillary leakiness within the central aspect of the mass (arrowheads); (E) axial ASL perfusion: marked increase in cerebral blood flow and hyperperfusion of tumor in the frontal lobe (different tumor than the one depicted in panels A–D).
FIGURE 6Diffuse glioma, IDH-mutant. (A) Axial FLAIR: Expansile hyperintense mass in the right medial temporal lobe; (B) axial T1 pre-contrast: hypointense mass; (C) axial T1 post-contrast: no associated enhancement within the mass; (D) axial SWI: no blood products or calcium within the mass; (E) axial DWI: linear reduced diffusion (white arrows) in the right hippocampus due to recent seizure activity; (F) axial ASL perfusion: Marked hyperperfusion within the right hippocampus and medial temporal lobe due to recent seizure activity (yellow arrow).
FIGURE 7Recurrent glioblastoma in right posterior insula (FMISO PET-MR). (A) Axial FLAIR: Ill-defined hyperintense area in the right posterior insula (black arrow); (B) axial T1 post-contrast: mild enhancement in the right posterior insula (white arrow); (C) axial 18F-FMISO PET: avid uptake of FMISO tracer in the right posterior insular (yellow arrow). Biopsy targeted to this region showed recurrent glioblastoma. 18F-FMISO, Fluoromisonidazole; PET, Positron emission tomography.
FIGURE 8Tractography corticospinal tract. Corticospinal tractography (yellow arrows) spanning from the superior motor cortex to pons overlaid on axial T1 post-contrast images showing enhancing necrotic glioblastoma (white arrows) in the left posterior parahippocampal gyrus.
FIGURE 12Tractography: superior longitudinal fasciculus. Sagittal T2-weighted images show glioblastoma centered in the hippocampus and parahippocampal gyrus (white arrows). Overlay of tractography of superior longitudinal fasciculus (yellow arrows) demonstrates sparing of the tract by the tumor.
FIGURE 13Pseudoprogression in glioblastoma. (A) Immediate pre-radiotherapy: axial T1 post-contrast images show rim enhancing and centrally necrotic left frontoparietal glioblastoma. (B) Eight-week follow up: Immediate post-radiotherapy axial T1 post-contrast images show marked increase in enhancement and necrosis. (C) Dynamic susceptibility-weighted contrast-enhanced perfusion MRI shows mild increase in blood volume along the posterior rim (black arrows). Single voxel proton spectroscopy targeted to the posterior component shows markedly increased lipid peak suggesting tissue necrosis. (D) Three-months follow up: axial T1 post-contrast images show marked decrease in enhancement and necrosis of the treated glioblastoma.