Abstract

Centrally restricted diffusion has been demonstrated in recurrent high-grade gliomas treated with bevacizumab. Our purpose was to assess the accuracy of centrally restricted diffusion in the diagnosis of radiation necrosis in high-grade gliomas not treated with bevacizumab. In this prospective study, we enrolled patients with high-grade gliomas who developed a new ring-enhancing necrotic lesion and who underwent re-resection. The presence of a centrally restricted diffusion within the ring-enhancing lesion was assessed visually on diffusion trace images and by ADC measurements on 3T preoperative diffusion tensor examination. The percentage of tumor recurrence and radiation necrosis in each surgical specimen was defined histopathologically. The association between centrally restricted diffusion and radiation necrosis was assessed using the Fisher exact test. Differences in ADC and the ADC ratio between the groups were assessed via the Mann-Whitney U test, and receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was performed. Seventeen patients had re-resected ring-enhancing lesions: 8 cases of radiation necrosis and 9 cases of tumor recurrence. There was significant association between centrally restricted diffusion by visual assessment and radiation necrosis (P = .015) with a sensitivity of 75% and a specificity of 88.9%, a positive predictive value 85.7%, and a negative predictive value of 80% for the diagnosis of radiation necrosis. There was a statistically significant difference in the ADC and ADC ratio between radiation necrosis and tumor recurrence (P = .027). The presence of centrally restricted diffusion in a new ring-enhancing lesion might indicate radiation necrosis rather than tumor recurrence in high-grade gliomas previously treated with standard chemoradiation without bevacizumab.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSECentrally restricted diffusion has been demonstrated in recurrent high-grade gliomas treated with bevacizumab

  • The presence of centrally restricted diffusion in a new ring-enhancing lesion might indicate radiation necrosis rather than tumor recurrence in high-grade gliomas previously treated with standard chemoradiation without bevacizumab

  • Diffusion restriction has been reported in high-grade glioma (HGG) treated with bevacizumab[2] and in radiation necrosis of metastatic brain lesions.[7]

Read more

Summary

Methods

We enrolled patients with high-grade gliomas who developed a new ringenhancing necrotic lesion and who underwent re-resection. The presence of a centrally restricted diffusion within the ring-enhancing lesion was assessed visually on diffusion trace images and by ADC measurements on 3T preoperative diffusion tensor examination. The association between centrally restricted diffusion and radiation necrosis was assessed using the Fisher exact test. Patient Population We consecutively enrolled patients with HGG who developed a new enhancing lesion on follow-up MR imaging after resection, radiation (60 Gy in 30 fractions of 2 Gy during 6 weeks), and temozolomide therapy, from December 2012 to December 2016. For the assessment of central diffusion restriction in newly developed necrotic enhancing lesions, the inclusion criteria were the presence of a central area of necrosis within the newly enhancing lesion and surgical re-resection of this lesion. A short interval between the operation and the MR imaging was chosen to ensure that the pathology results were representative of the lesions visualized on the imaging study

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call