Cortical mapping in glioma surgery: correlation of fMRI and direct electrical stimulation with Human Connectome Project parcellations

Author:

Bennett Carlos12,González Matías12,Tapia Gisella23,Riveros Rodrigo24,Torres Francisco24,Loyola Nicole12,Veloz Alejandro56,Chabert Stéren57

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Carlos van Buren, Valparaíso;

2. School of Medicine, Universidad de Valparaíso;

3. Department of Neurology, Hospital Carlos van Buren, Valparaíso;

4. Department of Radiology, Hospital Carlos van Buren, Valparaíso;

5. School of Biomedical Engineering, Universidad de Valparaíso;

6. Centro de Investigación y Desarrollo en Ingeniería en Salud CINGS, Universidad de Valparaíso;

7. Instituto Milenio Intelligent Healthcare Engineering, Santiago, Chile

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Noninvasive brain mapping with functional MRI (fMRI) and mapping with direct electrical stimulation (DES) are important tools in glioma surgery, but the evidence is inconclusive regarding the sensitivity and specificity of fMRI. The Human Connectome Project (HCP) proposed a new cortical parcellation that has not been thoroughly tested in a clinical setting. The main goal of this study was to evaluate the correlation of fMRI and DES mapping with HCP areas in a clinical setting, and to evaluate the performance of fMRI mapping in motor and language tasks in patients with glioma, using DES as the gold standard. METHODS Forty patients with supratentorial gliomas were examined using preoperative fMRI and underwent awake craniotomy with DES. Functional activation maps were visualized on a 3D representation of the cortex, classified according to HCP areas, and compared with surgical mapping. RESULTS Functional MRI was successful in identifying language and motor HCP areas in most cases, including novel areas such as 55b and the superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF). Functional MRI had a sensitivity and specificity of 100% and 71%, respectively, for motor function in HCP area 4. Sensitivity and specificity were different according to the area and fMRI protocol; i.e., semantic protocols performed better in Brodmann area (BA) 55b/peri-sylvian language areas with 100% sensitivity and 20% specificity, and word production protocols in BAs 44 and 45 with 70% sensitivity and 80% specificity. Some compensation patterns could be observed, such as motor activation of the postcentral gyrus in precentral gliomas. CONCLUSIONS HCP areas can be detected in clinical scenarios of glioma surgery. These areas appear relatively stable across patients, but compensation patterns seem to differ, allowing occasional resection of activating areas. Newly described areas such as 55b and SLF can act as critical areas in language networks. Surgical planning should account for these parcellations.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

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