Abstract

This study aims to introduce a method of three-dimensional (3D) volume magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements to evaluate the evolution of syringomyelia (SM) in adults with Chiari malformation type 1 (CM-1) after posterior fossa decompression (PFD), to provide reproducible and accurate measurements. Radiologic and clinical data were obtained for 28 patients. MRI 3D syrinx volumes were evaluated by 2 observers using Philips Healthcare Tumor Tracking tool. The mean SM preoperative volume was 9.1 ± 15.3 cm3 versus 4.6 ± 8.7 cm3 postoperatively, corresponding to a volume variation reduced by -50% ± 33.4%. A total of 21 patients (75%) showed >25% reduction in SM volume postoperatively and 25 patients (89.2%) showed good to excellent postoperative clinical outcomes. Very high interobserver and intraobserver agreement was noted for 3D volumetric analysis with Cohen weighted κ coefficients (0.899-0.991). A negative correlation was found between the number of involved metameres and the postoperative SM volume reduction (Pearson correlation coefficient= 0.378; P= 0.047). Patients with better clinical outcomes had fewer syrinx septae (F= 8.830; P= 0.001). Similarly, better syrinx volume reduction was associated with fewer septae (F= 1.554; P= 0.233). A positive relationship was observed between clinical outcomes and postoperative syrinx volume reduction (F= 1.554; P= 0.233), with data similar to the reported literature. This study shows that 3D volume measurement of the syrinx cavity on MRI is a reproducible and accurate method to assess the postoperative evolution of SM in CM-1 after PFD. Most patients (75%) showed a reduction of SM volume, with a mean volume decrease of 50%. The reliability is yet to be validated in further larger studies.

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