Longitudinal MR spectroscopy to detect progression in patients with lower-grade glioma in the surveillance phase

Author:

Avalos Lauro N1,Luks Tracy L1,Gleason Tyler1,Damasceno Pablo1,Li Yan1,Lupo Janine M1,Phillips Joanna23,Oberheim Bush Nancy Ann3,Taylor Jennie W3,Chang Susan M3,Villanueva-Meyer Javier E1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, California 94143 , USA

2. Department of Pathology, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, California 94143 , USA

3. Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, California 94143 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Monitoring lower-grade gliomas (LrGGs) for disease progression is made difficult by the limits of anatomical MRI to distinguish treatment related tissue changes from tumor progression. MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) offers additional metabolic information that can help address these challenges. The goal of this study was to compare longitudinal changes in multiparametric MRI, including diffusion weighted imaging, perfusion imaging, and 3D MRSI, for LrGG patients who progressed at the final time-point and those who remained clinically stable. Methods Forty-one patients with LrGG who were clinically stable were longitudinally assessed for progression. Changes in anatomical, diffusion, perfusion and MRSI data were acquired and compared between patients who remained clinically stable and those who progressed. Results Thirty-one patients remained stable, and 10 patients progressed. Over the study period, progressed patients had a significantly greater increase in normalized choline, choline-to-N-acetylaspartic acid index (CNI), normalized creatine, and creatine-to-N-acetylaspartic acid index (CRNI), than stable patients. CRNI was significantly associated with progression status and WHO type. Progressed astrocytoma patients had greater increases in CRNI than stable astrocytoma patients. Conclusions LrGG patients in surveillance with tumors that progressed had significantly increasing choline and creatine metabolite signals on MRSI, with a trend of increasing T2 FLAIR volumes, compared to LrGG patients who remained stable. These data show that MRSI can be used in conjunction with anatomical imaging studies to gain a clearer picture of LrGG progression, especially in the setting of clinical ambiguity.

Funder

LoGlio Collective

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery,Oncology,Neurology (clinical)

Reference40 articles.

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