NIMG-54. SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION ATLASES OF POST-TREATMENT MRI SCANS REVEAL DISTINCT HEMISPHERIC DISTRIBUTION OF GLIOBLASTOMA RECURRENCE FROM PSEUDO-PROGRESSION. (5th November 2018)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- NIMG-54. SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION ATLASES OF POST-TREATMENT MRI SCANS REVEAL DISTINCT HEMISPHERIC DISTRIBUTION OF GLIOBLASTOMA RECURRENCE FROM PSEUDO-PROGRESSION. (5th November 2018)
- Main Title:
- NIMG-54. SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION ATLASES OF POST-TREATMENT MRI SCANS REVEAL DISTINCT HEMISPHERIC DISTRIBUTION OF GLIOBLASTOMA RECURRENCE FROM PSEUDO-PROGRESSION
- Authors:
- Ismail, Marwa
Hill, Virginia
Statsevych, Volodymyr
Huang, Raymond
Correa, Ramon
Singh, Gagandeep
Bera, Kaustav
Thawani, Rajat
Madabhushi, Anant
Ahluwalia, Manmeet
Tiwari, Pallavi - Abstract:
- Abstract: PURPOSE: A significant challenge in post-treatment assessment of Glioblastoma is differentiating tumor recurrence (TR) from pseudo-progression (PsP), a radiation-induced treatment effect on routine MRI scans. Previous studies on pre-treatment MRI suggested that aggressive GBM lesions are spatially localized in the right hemisphere; and are associated with poor survival. We thus hypothesize that aggressive TR lesions appearing on post-treatment scans, will likely be more localized in the right hemisphere, as compared to benign PsP. METHODS: 106 post-treatment MRI studies (35 PsP, 71 TR) were collected from 2 institutions. Confirmation for PsP and TR was obtained either from pathologic resection or MRI follow-up using RANO criteria. Scans were registered to T1-weighted brain atlas (MNI152), followed by expert delineation of enhancing lesion on Gd-T1w MRI and peri-lesional hyperintensities on T2/FLAIR. Population atlases quantifying the frequency of occurrence of enhancing lesion and peri-lesional hyperintensities were constructed by averaging voxel intensities across all patients. Analysis of differential involvement (ADIFFI) based on a two-tailed Fisher's exact test was performed to compute significant differences (p-value<0.05) across PsP and TR voxels. Significant clusters were finally mapped to a structural atlas to provide anatomic localization of TR and PsP lesions. RESULTS: ADIFFI results showed TR prominence in the right parietal lobe with 75% occurrence inAbstract: PURPOSE: A significant challenge in post-treatment assessment of Glioblastoma is differentiating tumor recurrence (TR) from pseudo-progression (PsP), a radiation-induced treatment effect on routine MRI scans. Previous studies on pre-treatment MRI suggested that aggressive GBM lesions are spatially localized in the right hemisphere; and are associated with poor survival. We thus hypothesize that aggressive TR lesions appearing on post-treatment scans, will likely be more localized in the right hemisphere, as compared to benign PsP. METHODS: 106 post-treatment MRI studies (35 PsP, 71 TR) were collected from 2 institutions. Confirmation for PsP and TR was obtained either from pathologic resection or MRI follow-up using RANO criteria. Scans were registered to T1-weighted brain atlas (MNI152), followed by expert delineation of enhancing lesion on Gd-T1w MRI and peri-lesional hyperintensities on T2/FLAIR. Population atlases quantifying the frequency of occurrence of enhancing lesion and peri-lesional hyperintensities were constructed by averaging voxel intensities across all patients. Analysis of differential involvement (ADIFFI) based on a two-tailed Fisher's exact test was performed to compute significant differences (p-value<0.05) across PsP and TR voxels. Significant clusters were finally mapped to a structural atlas to provide anatomic localization of TR and PsP lesions. RESULTS: ADIFFI results showed TR prominence in the right parietal lobe with 75% occurrence in enhancing lesion and 61% in peri-lesional T2/FLAIR hyperintensities. PsP lesions were prominent in the left hemisphere, with peri-lesional T2/FLAIR hyperintensities having a multi-focal spatial distribution in the temporal lobe, insula, and putamen, and enhancing lesion being localized at the temporal lobe. CONCLUSION: TR tends to be lateralized towards the right parietal lobe. PsP tends to be multi-focally distributed in the left hemisphere. Such spatial localization on MRI could serve as a biomarker for differentiating PsP and TR. This could allow for immediate treatment changes in patients with recurrence, while avoiding unnecessary treatment for pseudo-progression. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Neuro-oncology. Volume 20(2018)Supplement 6
- Journal:
- Neuro-oncology
- Issue:
- Volume 20(2018)Supplement 6
- Issue Display:
- Volume 20, Issue 6 (2018)
- Year:
- 2018
- Volume:
- 20
- Issue:
- 6
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2018-0020-0006-0000
- Page Start:
- vi188
- Page End:
- vi188
- Publication Date:
- 2018-11-05
- Subjects:
- Brain Neoplasms -- Periodicals
Brain -- Tumors -- Periodicals
Brain -- Cancer -- Periodicals
Nervous system -- Cancer -- Periodicals
616.99481 - Journal URLs:
- http://neuro-oncology.dukejournals.org/ ↗
http://neuro-oncology.oxfordjournals.org/ ↗
http://www.oxfordjournals.org/content?genre=journal&issn=1522-8517 ↗
http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1093/neuonc/noy148.780 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 1522-8517
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 6081.288000
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