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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Diagnostic performance of whole brain volume perfusion CT in intra-axial brain tumors: preoperative classification accuracy and histopathologic correlation.

A. XydaUlrike HaberlandMichael KnauthKlaus JungRamona SchrammPeter SchrammHans Christoph BockErnst Klotz

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Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPerfusion ImagingHemodynamicsSensitivity and Specificity030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingCorrelation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImaging Three-DimensionalCortex (anatomy)Preoperative CaremedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingNeovascularization Pathologicbusiness.industryBrain NeoplasmsReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedPrognosisTumor BurdenCerebral blood volumemedicine.anatomical_structureMaximum intensity projectionBrain sizeCerebral hemisphereRadiographic Image Interpretation Computer-AssistedFemaleRadiologyNuclear medicinebusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedPerfusion030217 neurology & neurosurgeryAlgorithms

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Abstract Background To evaluate the preoperative diagnostic power and classification accuracy of perfusion parameters derived from whole brain volume perfusion CT (VPCT) in patients with cerebral tumors. Methods Sixty-three patients (31 male, 32 female; mean age 55.6 ± 13.9 years), with MRI findings suspected of cerebral lesions, underwent VPCT. Two readers independently evaluated VPCT data. Volumes of interest (VOIs) were marked circumscript around the tumor according to maximum intensity projection volumes, and then mapped automatically onto the cerebral blood volume (CBV), flow (CBF) and permeability Ktrans perfusion datasets. A second VOI was placed in the contra lateral cortex, as control. Correlations among perfusion values, tumor grade, cerebral hemisphere and VOIs were evaluated. Moreover, the diagnostic power of VPCT parameters, by means of positive and negative predictive value, was analyzed. Results Our cohort included 32 high-grade gliomas WHO III/IV, 18 low-grade I/II, 6 primary cerebral lymphomas, 4 metastases and 3 tumor-like lesions. Ktrans demonstrated the highest sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive value, with a cut-off point of 2.21 mL/100 mL/min, for both the comparisons between high-grade versus low-grade and low-grade versus primary cerebral lymphomas. However, for the differentiation between high-grade and primary cerebral lymphomas, CBF and CBV proved to have 100% specificity and 100% positive predictive value, identifying preoperatively all the histopathologically proven high-grade gliomas. Conclusion Volumetric perfusion data enable the hemodynamic assessment of the entire tumor extent and provide a method of preoperative differentiation among intra-axial cerebral tumors with promising diagnostic accuracy.

10.1016/j.ejrad.2012.08.005https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22959826