4.5 Article

An Assessment of the Pathological Classification and Postoperative Outcome of Focal Cortical Dysplasia by Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci13040611

Keywords

focal cortical dysplasia; MRI; hybrid (18F)-FDG PET; histopathological result; surgical outcome

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The purpose of this study was to investigate the consistency of MRI and Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI images in the histological classification of patients with focal cortical dysplasia. The study also aimed to evaluate the postoperative outcomes using these imaging techniques. The results showed that MRI had a high lesion detection sensitivity for focal cortical dysplasia, while Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI showed high sensitivity for detecting type II and III lesions.
Objectives: The purpose of this research was to investigate whether MRI and Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI images were consistent in the histological classification of patients with focal cortical dysplasia. Additionally, this research aimed to evaluate the postoperative outcomes with the MRI and Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI images of focal cortical dysplasia. Methods: A total of 69 cases in this research were evaluated preoperatively for drug-resistant seizures, and then surgical resection procedures of the epileptogenic foci were performed. The postoperative result was histopathologically confirmed as focal cortical dysplasia, and patients then underwent PET and MRI imaging within one month of the seizure. In this study, head MRI was performed using a 3.0 T magnetic resonance scanner (Philips) to obtain 3D T1WI images. The Siemens Biograph 16 scanner was used for a routine scanning of the head to obtain PET images. BrainLAB's iPlan software was used to fuse 3D T1 images with PET images to obtain PET/MRI images. Results: Focal cortical dysplasia was divided into three types according to ILAE: three patients were classified as type I, twenty-five patients as type II, and forty-one patients as type III. Patients age of onset under 18 and age of operation over 18 had a longer duration (p = 0.036, p = 0.021). MRI had a high lesion detection sensitivity of type III focal cortical dysplasia (p = 0.003). Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI showed high sensitivity in detecting type II and III focal cortical dysplasia lesions (p = 0.037). The lesions in Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI-positive focal cortical dysplasia patients were mostly located in the temporal and multilobar (p = 0.005, 0.040). Conclusion: Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI has a high accuracy in detecting the classification of focal cortical dysplasia. The results of this study indicate that patients with focal cortical dysplasia with positive Simultaneous Hybrid PET/MRI have better postoperative prognoses.

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