Abstract

In a study group of 18 consecutive patients with Ewing sarcoma proved by means of biopsy, the signal intensity characteristics of tumor on magnetic resonance (MR) images were assessed before and after chemotherapy. Sixteen patients underwent MR imaging at 1.5 T before chemotherapy; all 18 patients underwent MR imaging at 1.5 T within 10 days after chemotherapy. Standard spin-echo sequences were used with T1 and T2 weighting in all patients. The primary tumor was visualized in all 16 patients who underwent MR imaging before chemotherapy. Histologic correlation, obtained in 14 patients, showed that areas of high T2-weighted signal intensity on MR images obtained after chemotherapy may represent tumor necrosis, cystic hemorrhagic areas, and fibroblastic repair tissue. In 10 patients (71%), microscopic clusters of viable tumor cells were depicted in areas of both low and high signal intensity after treatment. It is concluded that MR imaging is unreliable for exclusion of active disease, although a pattern of change in signal intensity is qualitative evidence of chemotherapeutic effect.

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