4.5 Article

Characterization of MRI White Matter Signal Abnormalities in the Pediatric Population

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CHILDREN-BASEL
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children10020206

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white matter abnormalities; myelination; pediatric imaging; etiology; magnetic resonance imaging

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This study retrospectively characterized WMSAs in an unselected patient cohort at a large pediatric neuroimaging facility, aiming to learn more about the underlying disorders encountered in everyday clinical practice. The majority of WMSAs were acquired and were non-specific in brain MRI, followed by autoimmune disorders and non-genetic hypoxic and ischemic insults.
(1) Background and Purpose: The aim of this study was to retrospectively characterize WMSAs in an unselected patient cohort at a large pediatric neuroimaging facility, in order to learn more about the spectrum of the underlying disorders encountered in everyday clinical practice. (2) Materials and Methods: Radiology reports of 5166 consecutive patients with standard brain MRI (2006-2018) were searched for predefined keywords describing WMSAs. A neuroradiology specialist enrolled patients with WMSAs following a structured approach. Imaging characteristics, etiology (autoimmune disorders, non-genetic hypoxic and ischemic insults, traumatic white matter injuries, no final diagnosis due to insufficient clinical information, non-specific WMSAs, infectious white matter damage, leukodystrophies, toxic white matter injuries, inborn errors of metabolism, and white matter damage caused by tumor infiltration/cancer-like disease), and age/gender distribution were evaluated. (3) Results: Overall, WMSAs were found in 3.4% of pediatric patients scanned at our and referring hospitals within the ten-year study period. The majority were found in the supratentorial region only (87%) and were non-enhancing (78% of CE-MRI). WMSAs caused by autoimmune disorders formed the largest group (23%), followed by non-specific WMSAs (18%), as well as non-genetic hypoxic and ischemic insults (17%). The majority were therefore acquired as opposed to inherited. Etiology-based classification of WMSAs was affected by age but not by gender. In 17% of the study population, a definite diagnosis could not be established due to insufficient clinical information (mostly external radiology consults). (4) Conclusions: An integrated diagnosis that combines baseline demographics, including patient age as an important factor, clinical characteristics, and additional diagnostic workup with imaging patterns can be made in the majority of cases.

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