4.4 Article

Diffusion-weighted MRI characteristics of the cerebral metastasis to brain boundary predicts patient outcomes

Journal

BMC MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2342-14-26

Keywords

Cerebral metastasis; Brain neoplasms; Secondary; Neoplasm invasiveness; Diffusion-weighted imaging; Apparent diffusion coefficient; MRI

Funding

  1. Clinical Research Fellowship grant from the Medical Research Council, UK [MR/L017342/1]
  2. Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK
  3. Medical Research Council [MR/L017342/1, G0801447] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. MRC [G0801447, MR/L017342/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Background: Diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) has been used in neurosurgical practice mainly to distinguish cerebral metastases from abscess and glioma. There is evidence from other solid organ cancers and metastases that DWI may be used as a biomarker of prognosis and treatment response. We therefore investigated DWI characteristics of cerebral metastases and their peritumoral region recorded pre-operatively and related these to patient outcomes. Methods: Retrospective analysis of 76 cases operated upon at a single institution with DWI performed pre-operatively at 1.5T. Maps of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) were generated using standard protocols. Readings were taken from the tumor, peritumoral region and across the brain-tumor interface. Patient outcomes were overall survival and time to local recurrence. Results: A minimum ADC greater than 919.4 x 10(-6) mm(2)/s within a metastasis predicted longer overall survival regardless of adjuvant therapies. This was not simply due to differences between the types of primary cancer because the effect was observed even in a subgroup of 36 patients with the same primary, non-small cell lung cancer. The change in diffusion across the tumor border and into peritumoral brain was measured by the ADC transition coefficient or ATC and this was more strongly predictive than ADC readings alone. Metastases with a sharp change in diffusion across their border (ATC >0.279) showed shorter overall survival compared to those with a more diffuse edge. The ATC was the only imaging measurement which independently predicted overall survival in multivariate analysis (hazard ratio 0.54, 95% CI 0.3 - 0.97, p = 0.04). Conclusions: DWI demonstrates changes in the tumor, across the tumor edge and in the peritumoral region which may not be visible on conventional MRI and this may be useful in predicting patient outcomes for operated cerebral metastases.

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