Abstract

CSF-venous fistulas (CVFs) associated with spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) may have a transient appearance, relative to contrast arrival, which may influence the diagnostic performance of lateral decubitus CT myelography (CTM). We developed a dynamic CTM protocol using real-time bolus-tracking (dCTM-BT) to improve the temporal resolution and standardize the timing of CTM acquisitions post-intrathecal contrast administration. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the feasibility of the dCTM-BT technique and evaluate its diagnostic yield for CVF detection, stratified by brain MRI SIH findings. Patients with suspected SIH without extradural fluid collection on spine MRI who underwent dCTM-BT were retrospectively reviewed. CT bolus monitoring was performed at the upper thoracic level. Following the visualization of dense intrathecal contrast, at least 3 CTM acquisitions of the spine were obtained and reviewed by 2 neuroradiologists. The Bern SIH score was calculated on the brain MRI. The diagnostic yield for CVF detection was evaluated, stratified by Bern score categories and a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Out of 48 patients, 23 (48%) had a CVF on dCTM-BT, located at T1-5 (n = 4), T6-12 (n = 18), L1 (n = 1), with 70% on the right. CVF was identified in 22/22 (100%) of patients who had a high Bern score, 1/7 (14%) of those who had an intermediate score, and 0/19 (0%) of those who had a low score. The area under the ROC curve was 0.99 (95% CI, 0.98-1.00). The optimal cutoff was a Bern score of ≥5 (96% sensitivity, 100% specificity). dCTM-BT is feasible and has excellent diagnostic performance for CVF identification/localization. The Bern score is strongly associated with CVF detection and may help inform who will benefit from dCTM-BT.

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