Lack of choline elevation on proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in grade I–III gliomas

Author:

Chawla Sanjeev1,Lee Seung-Cheol1ORCID,Mohan Suyash1,Wang Sumei1,Nasrallah MacLean2,Vossough Arastoo13,Krejza Jaroslaw14,Melhem Elias R14,Ali Nabavizadeh S1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Radiology, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, USA

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, USA

3. Department of Radiology, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, USA

4. Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, USA

Abstract

Elevated levels of choline are generally emphasized as marker of increased cellularity and cell membrane turnover in gliomas. In this study, we investigated the incidence rate of lack of choline/creatine and choline/water elevation in a population of grade I–III gliomas. A cohort of 41 patients with histopathologically confirmed gliomas underwent multi-voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy on a 3 T magnetic resonance system prior to treatment. Peak areas for choline and myoinositol were measured from all voxels that exhibited hyperintensity on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images and were normalized to creatine and unsuppressed water from each voxel. The average metabolite/creatine and metabolite/water ratios from these voxels were then computed. Similarly, average metabolite ratios were computed from normal brain parenchyma. Gliomas were considered for lack of choline elevation when choline/creatine and choline/water ratios from neoplastic regions were less than those from normal brain parenchyma regions. Six of 41 (14.6%) grade I–III gliomas showed lack of elevation for choline/creatine and choline/water ratios compared to normal brain parenchyma. Four of these six gliomas also demonstrated elevated levels of myoinositol/creatine ratio. All other gliomas ( n = 35) had elevated choline levels from neoplastic regions relative to normal parenchyma. The sensitivity of choline/creatine or choline/water in determining a grade I–III glioma was 85.4%. These findings suggest that a lack of choline/creatine or choline/water elevation may be seen in some gliomas and low choline levels should not prevent us from considering the possibility of a grade I–III glioma.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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