Abstract

Background: Pretreatment differentiation between glioblastoma and metastasis is a frequently encountered dilemma in neurosurgical practice. Distinction is required for precise planning of resection or radiotherapy, and also for defining further diagnostic procedures. Morphology and spectroscopy imaging features are not specific and frequently overlap. This limitation of magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy was the reason to initiate this study. The aim of the present study was to determine whether the dataset of diffusion tensor imaging metrics contains information which may be used for the distinction between primary and secondary intra-axial neoplasms. Methods: Two diffusion tensor imaging parameters were measured in 81 patients with an expansive, ring-enhancing, intra-axial lesion on standard magnetic resonance imaging (1.5 T system). All tumors were histologically verified glioblastoma or secondary deposit. For qualitative analysis, two regions of interest were defined: intratumoral and immediate peritumoral region (locations 1 and 2, respectively). Fractional anisotropy and mean difusivity values of both groups were compared. Additional test was performed to determine if there was a significant difference in mean values between two locations. Results: A statistically significant difference was found in fractional anisotropy values among two locations, with decreasing values in the direction of neoplastic infiltration, although such difference was not observed in fractional anisotropy values in the group with secondary tumors. Mean difusivity values did not appear helpful in differentiation between these two entities. In both groups there was no significant difference in mean difusivity values, neither in intratumoral nor in peritumoral location. Conclusion: The results of our study justify associating the diffusion tensor imaging technique to conventional morphologic magnetic resonance imaging as an additional diagnostic tool for the distinction between primary and secondary intra-axial lesions. Quantitative analysis of diffusion tensor imaging metric, in particular measurement of fractional anisotropy in peritumoral edema facilitates accurate diagnosis.

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