Clinical Implication of Individually Tailored Segmentation Method for Distorted Hypothalamus in Craniopharyngioma

Author:

Hong A Ram,Lee Miwoo,Lee Jung Hyun,Kim Jung Hee,Kim Yong Hwy,Choi Hyung Jin

Abstract

ObjectiveSeveral attempts have been done to capture damaged hypothalamus (HT) using volumetric measurements to predict the development of hypothalamic obesity in patients with craniopharyngioma (CP). This study was to develop a novel method of HT volume measurement and examine the associations between postoperative HT volume and clinical parameters in patients with CP.MethodsWe included 78 patients with adult-onset CP who underwent surgical resection. Postoperative HT volume was measured using T1- and T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with a slice thickness of 3 mm, and corrected for temporal lobe volume. We collected data on pre- and postoperative body weights, which were measured at the time of HT volume measurements.ResultsThe corrected postoperative HT volume measured using T1- and T2-weighted images was significantly correlated (r=0.51 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.32 to 0.67], P<0.01). However, HT volume was overestimated using T1-weighted images owing to obscured MR signal of the thalamus in patients with severe HT damage. Therefore, we used T2-weighted images to evaluate its clinical implications in 72 patients with available medical data. Postoperative HT volume was negatively associated with preoperative body weight and preoperative tumor volume (r=–0.25 [95% CI -0.45 to -0.04], P=0.04 and r=–0.26 [95% CI -0.40 to -0.15], P=0.03, respectively). In the subgroup analysis of CP patients who underwent primary surgery (n=56), pre- and postoperative body weights were negatively associated with HT volume (r=–0.30 [95% CI -0.53 to -0.03], P=0.03 and r=–0.29 [95% CI -0.53 to -0.02], P=0.03, respectively).ConclusionsAdult-onset CP patients showed negative associations between postoperative HT volume and preoperative/postoperative body weight using a new method of HT volume measurement based on T2-weighted images.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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