Abnormal Vessel Tortuosity as a Marker of Treatment Response of Malignant Gliomas: Preliminary Report

Author:

Bullitt Elizabeth1,Ewend Matthew G.1,Aylward Stephen2,Lin Weili2,Gerig Guido3,Joshi Sarang4,Jung Inkyung5,Muller Keith5,Smith J. Keith2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery

2. Department of Radiology

3. Department of Computer Science

4. Department of Radiation Oncology

5. Department of Biostatistics University of North Carolina 349 Wing C, CB #7062 Chapel Hill, NC, 27599

Abstract

Despite multiple advances in medical imaging, noninvasive monitoring of therapeutic efficacy for malignant gliomas remains problematic. An underutilized observation is that malignancy induces characteristic abnormalities of vessel shape. These characteristic shape abnormalities affect both capillaries and much larger vessels in the tumor vicinity, involve larger vessels prior to sprout formation, and are generally not present in hypervascular benign tumors. Vessel shape abnormalities associated with malignancy thus may appear independently of increase in vessel density. We hypothesize that an automated, computerized analysis of vessel shape as defined from high-resolution MRA can provide valuable information about tumor activity during the treatment of malignant gliomas. This report describes vessel shape properties in 10 malignant gliomas prior to treatment, in 2 patients in remission during treatment, and in 2 patients with recurrent disease. One subject was scanned multiple times. The method involves an automated, statistical analysis of vessel shape within a region of interest for each tumor, normalized by the values obtained from the vessels within the same region of interest of 34 healthy subjects. Results indicate that untreated tumors display statistically significant vessel tortuosity abnormalities. These abnormalities involve vessels not only within the tumor margins as defined from MR but also vessels in the surrounding tissue. The abnormalities resolve during effective treatment and recur with tumor recurrence. We conclude that vessel shape analysis could provide an important means of assessing tumor activity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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