1. Objective and quantitative evaluation of angiographic vascularity in meningioma: parameters of dynamic susceptibility contrast-perfusion-weighted imaging as clinical indicators of preoperative embolization
- Author
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Kazuhide Adachi, Yuya Nishiyama, Kazuhiro Murayama, Shigeo Ohba, Mitsuhiro Hasegawa, Motoharu Hayakawa, Yuichi Hirose, and Jun Muto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Stain ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Meningioma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Vascularity ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,neoplasms ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Digital subtraction angiography ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Perfusion ,body regions ,Cerebral blood flow ,Angiography ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) assesses the necessity of preoperative embolization in meningioma cases but entails complication risks. Previous studies evaluating meningiomas' angiographic vascularity using perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) have performed subjective visual assessments, not managing to assess the need for preoperative embolization. We objectively assessed the angiographic stain of meningiomas and examined the usefulness of two parameters of dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC)-PWI, normalized cerebral blood volume (nCBV) and cerebral blood flow (nCBF), in predicting vascularity and the necessity of preoperative embolization. We retrospectively examined 52 patients who underwent surgery for primary meningioma and preoperative DSA and DSC-PWI. We calculated the normalized luminance (nLum) of the tumor stain in DSA. In 29 meningioma cases with a single feeding artery, we determined the DSC-PWI parameter that correlated with meningioma angiographic vascularity and predicted the necessity of preoperative embolization. We also compared vascularity between meningiomas with single and multiple feeding arteries and between convexity and skull-base meningiomas. nCBF (cut off: 3.66, P = 0.03, area under the curve [AUC] = 0.80) alone could predict the necessity of preoperative embolization and was more significantly correlated with the nLum than nCBV (P = 0.08, AUC = 0.73). Vascularity did not differ between meningiomas with single and multiple feeding arteries; skull-base meningiomas were more vascularized than convexity meningiomas (P = 0.0027). Our objective, quantitative assessments revealed nCBF as the most suitable parameter for evaluating meningioma vascularity. Tumor vascularity assessment using nCBF values and CBF images may aid predicting the necessity of preoperative DSA.
- Published
- 2020
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