scholarly journals IMG-21. PROSPECTIVE PREOPERATIVE DETERMINATION OF ISOCITRATE DEHYDROGENASE MUTATION IN GLIOMAS USING SPECTRAL EDITING MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii359-iii359
Author(s):  
Thanh Nguyen ◽  
Gerd Melkus ◽  
Michael Taccone ◽  
Diana Ghinda ◽  
Carlos Torres ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Gliomas are the most common malignant brain tumors in children and adults. A subset of these tumors harbour mutations in the enzyme isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) which produces the novel oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG). In general, patients with an IDH mutant glioma have a longer survival—often necessitating more re-treatment sessions over the span of a patient’s life and surveillance monitoring for tumor recurrence. The need to non-invasively detect early evidence of tumor recurrence is therefore heightened in this unique subset of patients with extended survival. As magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) has been demonstrated to measure biochemical components of intracranial tumors using MRI, we conducted a study in 58 pre-operative adult patients to determine if a diagnosis of IDH mutant glioma could be made confidently using imaging data. METHODS Patients underwent neuroimaging for diagnosis or preoperative planning on a 3 tesla MR scanner. A MEGA-PRESS spectral editing technique was employed. Imaging findings were directly compared to post-operative histopathologic diagnosis. RESUTLS: For all patients with gliomas from grade II to IV, detection of 2-HG with MEGA-PRESS sequence had a sensitivity between 48% and 81%, specificity between 60% and 100%, PPV between 53% and 100% and NPV between 77% and 85% depending on the CRLB threshold. Among the different metabolite ratios, a 2-HG/NAA ratio >0.034 had the highest sensitivity and specificity, 86% and 73% respectively. DISCUSSION Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is an underused advanced MR technique that deserves consideration in pediatric neuro-oncology given its utility in non-invasively detecting malignant gliomas.

Neurosurgery ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 186-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riyas Vettukattil ◽  
Michel Gulati ◽  
Torill E. Sjøbakk ◽  
Asgeir S. Jakola ◽  
Nadja A.M. Kvernmo ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii149-ii149
Author(s):  
Lazaros Lazaridis ◽  
Sied Kebir ◽  
Manuel Weber ◽  
Teresa Schmidt ◽  
Kathy Keyvani ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Advanced imaging techniques entered the field of neurooncology. In this analysis we compare the diagnostic potential of 18F-fluorethyltyrosine (FET) positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in their potential to preoperatively predict certain glioma subtypes. AIMS Goal of this analysis ist the evaluation of FET PET and MRS regarding the preoperative prediction of glioma subtypes. METHODS We analyzed 33 patients with histopathologically confirmed newly diagnosed glioma. The patients received FET PET and MRS during one single preoperative diagnostic session. According to the molecular portfolio patients were subdivided in IDH wildtype glioblastoma patients (GBM), IDH wildtype WHO grade II/III glioma patients (Astro_IDHwt), IDH mutant WHO grade II/III glioma patients without 1p/19q codeletion (Astro_IDHmut) and with 1p/19q codeletion (ODG). Mean and maximum tumor-to-brain ratio (TBRmean and TBRmax), N-acetylaspartate, choline and creatine peaks were correlated with postoperative tumor diagnosis. To gain generalizable implications we subdivided the study cohort into a development and validation subcohort. A support vector machine model was fitted to the development subcohort and evaluated on the validation subcohort. Receiver operating characteristic curve served to assess model performance. RESULTS GBM patients had highest TBRmax and TBRmean values (mean: 3.5 and 3.8) and the ODG patients showed the second highest TBRmax and TBRmean values (mean: 2.6 and 3). The distribution of MRS markers exhibited to clear trend. The performance of glioma subtyping was comparatively low for the TBR values (AUC: 0.68) and even lower for the MRS markers (AUC: 0.60). These results are in line with preliminary investigations performed by our institute for the comparison of 11C-methionine PET with MRS in preoperative glioma subtyping. CONCLUSIONS FET PET and MRS bear limited potential in glioma subgrouping. However, FET PET appears to be slightly superior. Investigation in a larger cohort is required to draw definite conclusions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 407-410
Author(s):  
Ümmügül Üyetürk ◽  
Kaan Helvacı ◽  
Burçin Budakoğlu ◽  
Özlem Uysal Sönmez ◽  
İbrahim Türker ◽  
...  

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