Correlation between magnetic resonance imaging grading and pathological grading in meningioma

Author:

Lin Bon-Jour1,Chou Kuan-Nein1,Kao Hung-Wen2,Lin Chin3,Tsai Wen-Chiuan4,Feng Shao-Wei1,Lee Meei-Shyuan3,Hueng Dueng-Yuan15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurological Surgery,

2. Department of Radiology, and

3. School of Public Health, and

4. Department of Pathology, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center;

5. Department of Biochemistry, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China

Abstract

Object This study investigated the specific preoperative MRI features of patients with intracranial meningiomas that correlate with pathological grade and provide appropriate preoperative planning. Methods From 2006 to 2012, 120 patients (36 men and 84 women, age range 20–89 years) with newly diagnosed symptomatic intracranial meningiomas undergoing resection were retrospectively analyzed in terms of radiological features of preoperative MRI. There were 90 WHO Grade I and 30 WHO Grade II or III meningiomas. The relationships between MRI features and WHO histopathological grade were analyzed and scored quantitatively. Results According to the results of multivariate logistic regression analysis, age ≥ 75 years, indistinct tumorbrain interface, positive capsular enhancement, and heterogeneous tumor enhancement were identified factors in the prediction of advanced histopathological grade. The prediction model was quantified as a scoring scale: 2 × (age) + 5 × (tumor-brain interface) + 3 × (capsular enhancement) + 2 × (tumor enhancement). The calculated score correlated positively with the probability of high-grade meningioma. Conclusions This scoring approach may be useful for clinicians in determining therapeutic strategy and in surgical planning for patients with intracranial meningiomas.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

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