Abstract

ObjectivesEvaluate types and prevalence of all, incidental, and clinically relevant incidental intracranial findings, i.e. those referred to primary physician or clinical specialist, in a cohort between 50 and 66 years from the Nord-Trøndelag Health (HUNT) study. Types of follow-up, outcome of repeated neuroimaging and neurosurgical treatment were assessed.Material and Methods1006 participants (530 women) underwent MRI of the head at 1.5T consisting of T1 weighted sagittal IR-FSPGR volume, axial T2 weighted, gradient echo T2* weighted and FLAIR sequences plus time of flight cerebral angiography covering the circle of Willis. The nature of a finding and if it was incidental were determined from previous radiological examinations, patient records, phone interview, and/or additional neuroimaging. Handling and outcome of the clinically relevant incidental findings were prospectively recorded. True and false positives were estimated from the repeated neuroimaging.ResultsPrevalence of any intracranial finding was 32.7%. Incidental intracranial findings were present in 27.1% and clinically relevant findings in 15.1% of the participants in the HUNT MRI cohort. 185 individuals (18.4%) were contacted by phone about their findings. 40 participants (6.2%) underwent ≥ 1 additional neuroimaging session to establish etiology. Most false positives were linked to an initial diagnosis of suspected glioma, and overall positive predictive value of initial MRI was 0.90 across different diagnoses. 90.8% of the clinically relevant incidental findings were developmental and acquired cerebrovascular pathologies, the remaining 9.2% were intracranial tumors, of which extra-axial tumors predominated. In total, 3.9% of the participants were referred to a clinical specialist, and 11.7% to their primary physician. 1.4% underwent neurosurgery/radiotherapy, and 1 (0.1%) experienced a procedure related postoperative deficit.ConclusionsIn a general population between 50 and 66 years most intracranial findings on MRI were incidental, and >15% of the cohort was referred to clinical-follow up. Hence good routines for handling of findings need to be in place to ensure timely and appropriate handling.

Highlights

  • Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is increasingly used in the clinic due to its superior ability to visualize and differentiate between brain pathologies

  • 1006 participants (530 women) underwent MRI of the head at 1.5T consisting of T1 weighted sagittal IR-FSPGR volume, axial T2 weighted, gradient echo T2* weighted and FLAIR sequences plus time of flight cerebral angiography covering the circle of Willis

  • Incidental intracranial findings were present in 27.1% and clinically relevant findings in 15.1% of the participants in the HUNT MRI cohort. 185 individuals (18.4%) were contacted by phone about their findings. 40 participants (6.2%) underwent ! 1 additional neuroimaging session to establish etiology

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is increasingly used in the clinic due to its superior ability to visualize and differentiate between brain pathologies. It is used with increasing frequency in studies of neurological, neurosurgical and psychiatric diseases and disorders [1,2,3], brain development and aging [4,5,6] and neurobiology [7, 8]. The clinical consequences of uncovering incidental findings in terms of referral to different kinds of follow-up, has been investigated in only a few studies [10, 13,14,15,16]. The prevalence of different types of intracranial findings, whether a finding is incidental, its clinical impact and the rate of a false positives, as well as the types of follow-up needed to treat an incidental finding according to established guidelines, have significant administrative, logistic and health economic implications for the study organizers, and may have life altering and economic consequences for MRI study participants

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