Glioblastoma and anaplastic astrocytoma represent the most commonly encountered high-grade-glioma (HGG) in adults. Although both neoplasms are very distinct entities in context of epidemiology, ...clinical course and prognosis, their appearance in conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is very similar. In search for additional information aiding the distinction of potentially confusable neoplasms, histogram analysis of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps recently proved to be auxiliary in a number of entities. Therefore, our present exploratory retrospective study investigated whether ADC histogram profile parameters differ significantly between anaplastic astrocytoma and glioblastoma, reflect the proliferation index Ki-67, or are associated with the prognostic relevant MGMT (methylguanine-DNA methyl-transferase) promotor methylation status.
Pre-surgical ADC volumes of 56 HGG patients were analyzed by histogram-profiling. Association between extracted histogram parameters and neuropathology including WHO-grade, Ki-67 expression and MGMT promotor methylation status was investigated due to comparative and correlative statistics.
Grade IV gliomas were more heterogeneous than grade III tumors. More specifically, ADCmin and the lowest percentile ADCp10 were significantly lower, whereas ADCmax, ADC standard deviation and Skewness were significantly higher in the glioblastoma group. ADCmin, ADCmax, ADC standard deviation, Kurtosis and Entropy of ADC histogram were significantly correlated with Ki-67 expression. No significant difference could be revealed by comparison of ADC histogram parameters between MGMT promotor methylated and unmethylated HGG.
ADC histogram parameters differ significantly between glioblastoma and anaplastic astrocytoma and show distinct associations with the proliferative activity in both HGG. Our results suggest ADC histogram profiling as promising biomarker for differentiation of both, however, further studies with prospective multicenter design are wanted to confirm and further elaborate this hypothesis.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
Low-grade gliomas (LGG) in adults are usually slow growing and frequently asymptomatic brain tumors, originating from glial cells of the central nervous system (CNS). Although regarded formally as ..."benign" neoplasms, they harbor the potential of malignant transformation associated with high morbidity and mortality. Their complex and unpredictable tumor biology requires a reliable and conclusive presurgical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A promising and emerging MRI approach in this context is histogram based apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) profiling, which recently proofed to be capable of providing prognostic relevant information in different tumor entities. Therefore, our study investigated whether histogram profiling of ADC distinguishes grade I from grade II glioma, reflects the proliferation index Ki-67, as well as the IDH (isocitrate dehydrogenase) mutation and MGMT (methylguanine-DNA methyl-transferase) promotor methylation status.
Pre-treatment ADC volumes of 26 LGG patients were used for histogram-profiling. WHO-grade, Ki-67 expression, IDH mutation, and MGMT promotor methylation status were evaluated. Comparative and correlative statistics investigating the association between histogram-profiling and neuropathology were performed.
Almost the entire ADC profile (p25, p75, p90, mean, median) was significantly lower in grade II vs. grade I gliomas. Entropy, as second order histogram parameter of ADC volumes, was significantly higher in grade II gliomas compared with grade I gliomas. Mean, maximum value (ADCmax) and the percentiles p10, p75, and p90 of ADC histogram were significantly correlated with Ki-67 expression. Furthermore, minimum ADC value (ADCmin) was significantly associated with MGMT promotor methylation status as well as ADC entropy with IDH-1 mutation status.
ADC histogram-profiling is a valuable radiomic approach, which helps differentiating tumor grade, estimating growth kinetics and probably prognostic relevant genetic as well as epigenetic alterations in LGG.
Flow diversion (FD) has emerged as superior minimally invasive therapy for cerebral aneurysms. However, aneurysms of small peripheral vessel segments have not yet been adequately treatable. More ...specifically, currently established devices necessitate large microcatheters which impede atraumatic maneuvering. The Silk Vista Baby (SVB), a novel flow diverter, offers the as yet unique feature of deliverability via a 0.017 inch microcatheter. This study reports our first experience with the SVB in challenging intracranial vessels employing a vessel-specific tailored microcatheter strategy.
25 patients (27 aneurysms) were prospectively included. A total of 30 SVBs were employed, predominantly targeting demanding aneurysms of the anterior communicating artery complex. The efficacy of the FD was assessed using two-dimensional vector-based perfusion and conventional digital subtraction angiography (DSA) after implantation and at the first follow-up at 3 months. The first follow-up was available in 22 patients.
All devices were implanted without technical or clinical complications. Eleven treatments were performed using the recommended Headway 17. In 14 interventions the even more maneuverable Excelsior SL10 was used, which was previously tried and tested for safety 'in vitro' as an alternative delivery system. Aneurysmal influx was strongly reduced after implantation. All parent vessels remained patent. 17/27 aneurysms were completely occluded at first follow-up (∼2.7 months), 6/27 aneurysms showed decreased influx or delayed washout and one remained unchanged. In three cases follow-up DSAs are remaining.
SVB provides enhanced controllability in vulnerable segments beyond the circle of Willis. Smaller variants (2.25 mm and 2.75 mm) can safely be implanted via the superiorly navigable Excelsior SL10. Hence, the SVB represents the next evolutionary step in minimally invasive treatment of cerebral aneurysms.
Introduction: In this study we compare the ultrasound features in the median nerve in patients with different types of Charcot–Marie–Tooth (CMT) disease and hereditary neuropathies with liability to ...pressure palsies (HNPP) as a typical entrapment neuropathy. Methods: Median nerve ultrasound and conduction studies were performed in patients with CMT1A (n = 12), MFN2‐associated CMT2A (n = 7), CMTX (n = 5), and HNPP (n = 5), and in controls (n = 28). Results: Median nerve cross‐sectional area (CSA) was significantly increased in CMT1A, whereas, in axonal CMT2A, fascicle diameter (FD) was enlarged. CSA correlated with nerve conduction slowing in CMT1A and with axonal loss, as shown by motor and sensory nerve amplitudes in both CMT1A and CMT2A. A relatively low wrist‐to‐forearm‐ratio (WFR <0.8) or a relatively high WFR (>1.8) appeared to be unlikely in MFN2 and Cx32 mutations of CMT2A and CMTX, respectively. Conclusion: Differences in CSA, FD, and WFR of the median nerve can be helpful in defining subtypes of hereditary neuropathies. Muscle Nerve 47:385‐395, 2013
Aphasia can occur in a broad range of pathological conditions that affect cortical or subcortical structures. Here we test the hypothesis that white matter integrity of language pathways assessed by ...preoperative diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is associated with language performance and its recovery after glioma resection. 27 patients with preoperative DTI were included. Segmentation of the arcuate fascicle (AF), the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle (IFOF), the inferior longitudinal fascicle (ILF), the superior longitudinal fascicle (SLF), and the uncinate fascicle (UF) was performed with a fully-connected neural network (FCNN, TractSeg). Median fractional anisotropy (FA) was extracted from the resulting volumes as surrogate marker for white matter integrity and tested for correlation with clinical parameters. After correction for demographic data and multiple testing, preoperative white matter integrity of the IFOF, the ILF, and the UF in the left hemisphere were independently and significantly associated with aphasia three months after surgery. Comparison between patients with and without aphasia three months after surgery revealed significant differences in preoperative white matter integrity of the left AF (p = 0.021), left IFOF (p = 0.015), left ILF (p = 0.003), left SLF (p = 0.001, p = 0.021, p = 0.043 for respective sub-bundles 1–3), left UF (p = 0.041) and the right AF (p = 0.027). Preoperative assessment of white matter integrity of the language network by time-efficient MRI protocols and FCNN-driven segmentation may assist in the evaluation of postoperative rehabilitation potential in glioma patients.
Background and Purpose:
Low-profile flow diverter stents (FDS) quite recently amended peripheral segments as targets for hemodynamic aneurysm treatment; however, reports on outcomes, especially later ...than 3 months, are scarce. This study therefore reports our experience with the novel silk vista baby (SVB) FDS and respective outcomes after 8 and 11 months with special respect to specific adverse events.
Materials and Methods:
Forty-four patients (mean age, 53 years) harboring 47 aneurysms treated with the SVB between June 2018 and December 2019 were included in our study. Clinical, procedural, and angiographic data were collected. Follow-ups were performed on average after 3, 8, and 11 months, respectively. Treatment effect was assessed using the O'Kelly Marotta (OKM) grading system.
Results:
Overall, angiographic follow-ups were available for 41 patients/45 aneurysms. Occlusion or significant reduction in aneurysmal perfusion (OKM: D1, B1–B3 and A2–A3) was observed in 98% of all aneurysms after 8 months. Only 2% of the treated aneurysms remained morphologically unaltered and without an apparent change in perfusion (OKM A1). Adverse events in the early post-interventional course occurred in seven patients; out of them, mRS-relevant morbidity at 90 days related to FDS treatment was observable in two patients. One death occurred in the context of severe SAH related to an acutely ruptured dissecting aneurysm of the vertebral artery.
Conclusion:
The SVB achieves sufficient occlusion rates of intracranial aneurysms originating from peripheral segments, which are comparable to prior established conventional FDS with acceptably low complication rates. However, alteration of a hemodynamic equilibrium in distal localizations requires special attention to prevent ischemic events.
Purpose:
The early detection of cerebral aneurysms plays a major role in preventing subarachnoid hemorrhage. The authors present a system to automatically detect cerebral aneurysms in multimodal 3D ...angiographic data sets. The authors’ system is parametrizable for contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE‐MRA), time‐of‐flight magnetic resonance angiography (TOF‐MRA), and computed tomography angiography (CTA).
Methods:
Initial volumes of interest are found by applying a multiscale sphere‐enhancing filter. Several features are combined in a linear discriminant function (LDF) to distinguish between true aneurysms and false positives. The features include shape information, spatial information, and probability information. The LDF can either be parametrized by domain experts or automatically by training. Vessel segmentation is avoided as it could heavily influence the detection algorithm.
Results:
The authors tested their method with 151 clinical angiographic data sets containing 112 aneurysms. The authors reach a sensitivity of 95% with CE‐MRA data sets at an average false positive rate per data set (FPDS) of 8.2. For TOF‐MRA, we achieve 95% sensitivity at 11.3 FPDS. For CTA, we reach a sensitivity of 95% at 22.8 FPDS. For all modalities, the expert parametrization led to similar or better results than the trained parametrization eliminating the need for training. 93% of aneurysms that were smaller than 5 mm were found. The authors also showed that their algorithm is capable of detecting aneurysms that were previously overlooked by radiologists.
Conclusions:
The authors present an automatic system to detect cerebral aneurysms in multimodal angiographic data sets. The system proved as a suitable computer‐aided detection tool to help radiologists find cerebral aneurysms.
Background
Hemodynamic therapy with Flow-Diverters has become a fundamental option for treatment of cerebral aneurysms. A major obstacle of Flow-Diverters is the comparatively stiff microcatheter ...required for implantation. Consequentially, maneuverability is limited and primary catheterization of peripheral targets may be difficult or even futile in challenging vascular anatomies. To overcome this, a highly navigable microcatheter must be used to attain the desired vascular segment, followed by a hardly controllable exchange-maneuver via a long microwire, involving a high risk for wire-perforation. Our study aimed to investigate the value of low-profile stent-retrievers as a railway for introduction of the required microcatheter, which allows to maintain a stable endovascular position and reduce the risk for procedural vessel injury.
Methods
14cases (8females, mean-age 59y) of Flow-Diverter-Implantation requiring the use of a low-profile stent-retriever were reviewed. All cases featured a challenging vascular anatomy. After micro-catheterization of the desired segment, the stent-retriever was carefully deployed as an anchor in a secure, distal location. In all cases a pREset/LITE-stent-retriever was used for introduction of the equipment required for implantation.
Results
In all cases the anchoring-maneuver was performed without technical complications. The stent-retrievers maintained a stable position after deployment in all situations. No potential traumatic sudden movements of the microcatheter occurred. No procedure-related perforations, dissections or vasospasms were observable during the interventions or their aftermath.
Conclusions
In our experience the stent-retriever-anchoring-maneuver represents a potentially essential and safe amendment for flow diverter treatment in technically challenging situations.
Background and Purpose:
Flow diversion has profoundly changed the way aneurysms are treated. However, it conventionally requires dual antiplatelet medication and has yet been considered off-label use ...in the posterior circulation or within peripheral vessels of the anterior circulation. Here, we report our experience with the p48MW/p48MW hydrophilic coating (HPC) in the anterior and posterior circulation. This novel low-profile flow diverter is specifically designed for treatment of small peripheral vessels, and the p48MW HPC has an anti-thrombotic polymer coating, which allows application of a single antiplatelet function medication in conditions that expectably require further surgery.
Materials and Methods:
Thirty-two patients were prospectively included. Twenty-six treatments were performed with one flow diverter, four required two overlapping flow diverters, one case demanded three overlapping flow diverters, and in one case, extensive dissecting aneurysm telescoping with eight flow diverters was necessary. Twenty-two complex bifurcation aneurysms were treated. Three months' follow-up was available for 14 patients.
Results:
Deployment was uneventful in all cases. In four cases, undersizing was unavoidable and resulted in significant shortening of the flow diverter, which demanded implantation of further flow diverters to sufficiently treat the target aneurysm. Three flow diverters required balloon angioplasty for optimal wall approximation. All parent vessels remained patent. Available 3-month follow-up studies showed decreased influx or delayed washout in all aneurysms; none was occluded completely. There were no device-related clinical complications.
Conclusions:
Implantation of the p48MW/p48MW HPC is safe and effective for treatment of distally located cerebral aneurysms. Considering the reported rates of ischemic complications associated with flow diversion of complex bifurcation aneurysms, the p48MW/p48MW HPC potentially provides increased safety for complex bifurcation aneurysms in the anterior and posterior circulation.
Background:
In the last decade, flow diversion (FD) has been established as hemodynamic treatment for cerebral aneurysms arising from proximal and distal cerebral arteries. However, two significant ...limitations remain—the need for 0.027” microcatheters required for delivery of most flow diverting stents (FDS), and long-term dual anti-platelet therapy (DAPT) in order to prevent FDS-associated thromboembolism, at the cost of increasing the risk for hemorrhage. This study reports the experience of three neurovascular centers with the p64MW-HPC, a FDS with anti-thrombotic coating that is implantable
via
a 0.021” microcatheter.
Materials and methods:
Three neurovascular centers contributed to this retrospective analysis of patients that had been treated with the p64MW-HPC between March 2020 and March 2021. Clinical data, aneurysm characteristics, and follow-up results, including procedural and post-procedural complications, were recorded. The hemodynamic effect was assessed using the O'Kelly–Marotta Scale (OKM).
Results:
Thirty-two patients (22 female, mean age 57.1 years) with 33 aneurysms (27 anterior circulation and six posterior circulation) were successfully treated with the p64MW-HPC. In 30/32 patients (93.75%), aneurysmal perfusion was significantly reduced immediately post implantation. Follow-up imaging was available for 23 aneurysms. Delayed aneurysm perfusion (OKM A3: 8.7%), reduction in aneurysm size (OKM B1-3: 26.1%), or sufficient separation from the parent vessel (OKM C1-3 and D1: 65.2%) was demonstrated at the last available follow-up after a mean of 5.9 months. In two cases, device thrombosis after early discontinuation of DAPT occurred. One delayed rupture caused a caroticocavernous fistula. The complications were treated sufficiently and all patients recovered without permanent significant morbidity.
Conclusion:
Treatment with the p64MW-HPC is safe and feasible and achieves good early aneurysm occlusion rates in the proximal intracranial circulation, which are comparable to those of well-established FDS. Sudden interruption of DAPT in the early post-interventional phase can cause in-stent thrombosis despite the HPC surface modification. Deliverability
via
the 0.021” microcatheter facilitates treatment in challenging vascular anatomies.