Abstract

Postradiation treatment necrosis is one of the most serious late sequelae and appears within 6months. The magnetic resonance spectroscopy imaging (MRSI) has been used for the detection of brain tumors. The study aimed to determine the radiological accuracy and efficacy in distinguishing recurrent brain tumor from radiation-induced necrosis by identifying pseudoprogression. The research was performed in accordance with the preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis guidelines. International electronic databases including 15 English sources were investigated. A total of 4281 papers with 2159 citations from 15 databases from 2011 to 2021 met the search strategies of magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy in recurrent brain tumors and postradiation necrosis. Nine studies were enrolled in the meta-analysis with a total of 354 patients (203 male and 151 female) whose average age ranged from 4 to 74years. Anbarloui etal., Elias etal., Nemattalla etal., Smith etal., Zeng etal., and Weybright etal. showed strong evidence of heterogeneity regarding choline/N-acetylaspartate (Cho/NAA) ratio in the evaluation of the nine studies. Elias etal., Nemattalla etal., Bobek-Billewicz etal., and Smith etal. showed a high heterogeneity in Cho/creatine (Cr) ratio. Elias etal., Nemattalla etal., Smith etal., and Weybright etal. revealed high heterogeneity in NAA/Cr ratio estimates. MR spectroscopy is effective in distinguishing recurrent brain tumors from necrosis. Our meta-analysis revealed that Cho/NAA, Cho/Cr, and NAA/Cr ratios were significantly better predictor of detected recurrent tumor. Therefore, the MRSI is an informative tool in the distinction of tumor recurrence versus necrosis.

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