10:00 |
0280. |
DSC-MRI Measures of
Relative Cerebral Blood Volume (rCBV) as a Prognostic Marker
for Progression-Free and Overall Survival in Recurrent
Glioblastoma: Results from the ACRIN 6677/RTOG 0625
Multi-Center Trial
Kathleen M. Schmainda1, Zheng Zhang2,
Jerrold Boxerman3, Melissa Prah1,
Bradley Snyder2, Devyani Bedekar4,
A Gregory Sorensen5, Mark R Gilbert6,
and Daniel P Barboriak7
1Radiology, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, 2Center
for Statistical Sciences, Brown University, Rhode
Island, United States, 3Diagnostic
Imaging, Rhode Island Hospital, Rhode Island, United
States, 4Medical
College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United
States,5Massachusetts General Hospital,
Massachusetts, United States, 6Neuro-Oncology,
University of Texas, Houston, Texas, United States, 7Radiology,
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States
RTOG 0625/ACRIN 6677 is a multicenter, randomized, phase
II trial of bevacizumab with irinotecan or temozolomide
in recurrent glioblastoma (GBM). In this study of 23
patients the percent changes in both normalized and
standardized rCBV, derived from DSC-MRI, are predictive
of progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival
(OS) when measured at 2 and 16 weeks following treatment
initiation.
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10:12 |
0281. |
Identification of Arterio-Venous
Shunts by Vessel Architectural Imaging Reveals Mechanisms of
Vascular Normalization during Anti-Angiogenic Therapy
Guro K. Rognsvag1, Atle Bjornerud1,2,
A. Gregory Sorensen3,4, Patrick Y. Wen5,
Tracy T. Batchelor6,7, Rakesh K. Jain6,
and Kyrre E. Emblem1,3
1The Intervention Centre, Oslo University
Hospital, Oslo, Oslo, Norway, 2Dept
of Physics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway, 3Department
of Radiology and Athinoula A. Martinos Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States,4Siemens
Healthcare, Malvern, PA, United States, 5Center
for Neuro-Oncology, Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's
Cancer Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA,
United States, 6Department
of Radiation Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital
and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States, 7Department
of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
The microvasculature of tumors is abnormal and tortuous
with arterio-venous shunts. Shunts are short high-flow
vascular pathways that cause parts of the blood flow to
bypass capillary regions, thus impairing delivery of
oxygen to the tissue and increasing resistance to
therapy. Vessel architectural imaging (VAI) has recently
been introduced as a new paradigm for in vivo assessment
of cancer vasculature. By performing Monte Carlo
simulations of normal and shunting tissue, and
evaluating MRI data of patients undergoing anti-angiogenic
therapy, we show that VAI identifies arterio-venous
shunts and help reveal mechanism of normalization during
anti-angiogenic therapy.
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10:24 |
0282.
|
Multiparametrical diffusion
tensor imaging for the detection of anaplastic
transformation of low-grade gliomas
Martin Thomas Freitag1, Christian Weber1,2,
Klaus Maier-Hein1,2, Franciszek Binczyck3,
Barbara Bobek-Billewicz4, Joanna Polanska3,
Rafal Tarnawski4, and Bram Stieltjes1
1Section Quantitative Imaging-based Disease
Characterization, Department of Radiology, German Cancer
Research Center, Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, 2Division
of Medical and Biological Informatics, German Cancer
Research Center, Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany,3Silesian
University of Technology, Gliwice, Poland, 4Institute
of Oncology, Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer
Center, Gliwice, Poland
Here, the value of multiparametrical
diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI) maps was tested for the
often difficult detection of recurrent low-grade glioma
in 48 adults. At the time point of recurrence, defined
by new contrast uptake, hypointense lesions were seen
within the T2-hyperintensity zone in fractional
anisotropy, axial, mean and radial diffusitivity maps in
every patient representing a hypercellular equivalent.
Comparing all tensor-derived maps quantitatively,
contrast-to-noise and combined sensitivity/specificity
was highest for axial diffusitivity to visualize and
detect this hypercellularity. DTI acquisitions should be
routinely included for the management of low-grade
gliomas as axial diffusitivity maps may provide
essential additional diagnostic information.
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10:36 |
0283. |
Diffusion Tensor
Imaging-based Histogram Analysis for detection and
quantification of low-grade gliomas structural changes
during chemotherapy
Antonella Castellano1, Marina Donativi2,
Roberta Rudà3, Marco Riva4,
Giorgio De Nunzio2, Antonella Iadanza1,
Matteo Rucco5, Luca Bertero3,
Lorenzo Bello4, Riccardo Soffietti3,
and Andrea Falini1
1Neuroradiology Unit and CERMAC, Università
Vita-Salute San Raffaele and Ospedale San Raffaele,
Milan, Italy, 2A.D.A.M.,
Advanced Data Analysis in Medicine, University of
Salento, Lecce, Italy, 3Neuro-oncology,
Department of Neuroscience and Oncology, University of
Torino, Turin, Italy,4Neurosurgery,
Department of Neurological Sciences, Università di
Milano, Istituto Clinico Humanitas, Milan, Italy, 5School
of Science and Technology, Computer Science Division,
University of Camerino, Camerino, MC, Italy
In low-grade gliomas during chemotherapy, changes in
Diffusion Tensor Imaging metrics (MD, FA, pure isotropy
and pure anisotropy) may be an early signature for
Temozolomide response, correlating with clinical
response better than conventional MRI criteria:
structural changes quantified by DTI-based histogram
analysis support the hypothesis of a “shrinkage” of the
tumor in response to chemotherapy, especially at the
level of margins of infiltration. Quantitative measures
derived from this analysis can improve the monitoring of
low-grade gliomas treatment response.
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10:48 |
0284. |
Application of
compressed-sensing-accelerated diffusion spectrum imaging in
patients with brain tumors
Ek T Tan1, Robert J Young2, Kyung
K Peck2,3, Xiaofeng Liu1, Jonathan
I Sperl4, Mehrnaz Jenabi2, and
Luca Marinelli1
1GE Global Research, Niskayuna, NY, United
States, 2Radiology,
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY,
United States, 3Medical
Physics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New
York, NY, United States, 4GE
Global Research, Garching, Munich, Germany
Compressed-sensing accelerated diffusion spectrum
imaging (CS-DSI) was compared to conventional DTI in ten
patients with intracranial brain tumors, whereby DSI
clearly provides improved performance in the presence of
crossing-fibers and (edema and tumors). DSI acquisition
was accelerated by factors of 4 and 5 to achieve scan
times under 14 minutes on a conventional 3T system.
CS-DSI provided superior tract visualization in all
patients. The tract-based dependent measures obtained
with CS-DSI were more consistent with pathology-induced
changes than those with DTI. These preliminary results
suggest that CS-DSI may be helpful in preoperative
planning in patients with brain tumors.
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11:00 |
0285. |
Low-frequency Oscillations
Characterize Motor Network Plasticity Abnormalities in
Patients with Brain Gliomas -
permission withheld
Chen Niu1, Pan Lin2, Zhigang Min1,
Rana Netra1, Qiuli Zhang1, Xin Liu2,
Cuiping Mao1, Faxiu Bao1, and Ming
Zhang1
1The First Affiliated Hospital of Medical
College, Xi¡¯an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shaanxi,
China, 2Institute
of Biomedical Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong University,
Shaanxi, China
Brain plasticity is a continuous process during
slow-growing tumor formation, which remodels neural
organization and optimizes brain network function. In
this study, we aimed to investigate whether motor
function plasticity exists in patients with slow-growing
brain tumors located in or near to motor areas, and who
exhibited no motor deficits. We use resting-state
functional magnetic resonance (rs-fMRI) data in the
frequency domain, and investigate the relationship
between the low frequency band shift and motor
functional plasticity changes in patients with brain
tumor, and achieve a better understanding of underlying
mechanisms.
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11:12 |
0286.
|
Experience with q-ball
language tracking in brain tumor patients
Eduardo Caverzasi1, Shawn Hervey-Jumper2,
Valentina Panara3, Caroline A. Racine2,
Vanitha Sankaranarayanan4, Nico Papinutto1,
Kesshi Jordan5, Jing Li2, Mitchel
S. Berger2, and Roland G. Henry1
1Department of Neurology, University of
California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Department
of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San
Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States, 3ITAB
- Institute of Advanced Biomedical Technologies,
University G.D'Annunzio, Chieti, Italy, Italy, 4Department
of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of
California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 5Graduate
Program in Bioengineering, UC Berkeley/UC San Francisco,
CA, United States
We show the successful application of q-ball tracking in
pre-surgical planning for language pathways in brain
tumor patients and for post-surgery white matter
tracking in order to assess postoperative tract damages.
The rating scales developed for fiber pathways damage
were found to be highly reproducible and provided
significant correlations with language deficits. The
fiber tracking spatial inter-operator reliability was
very high considering the intrinsic variability of this
technique on a voxel-wise segmentation. Our results
confirm the importance of preservation of dorsal stream
tracts (arcuate fascicle and temporo-parietal portion of
the superior longitudinal fascicle), in order to reduce
language morbidity of brain tumor patients.
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11:24 |
0287. |
3D MR Spectroscopic Imaging
of 2-Hydroxyglutarate in patients with mutant IDH1 glioma
Ovidiu Cristian Andronesi1, Franziska Loebel2,
Wolfgang Bogner3, Malgorzata Marjanska4,
Elizabeth Gerstner5, Andrew Chi5,
Tracy T. Batchelor5, Daniel P. Cahill6,
and Bruce R. Rosen1
1Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging,
Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States,2Department
of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston,
MA, United States, 3MR
Center of Excellence, Department of Radiology, Medical
University Vienna, Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 4Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of
Minnesota, MN, United States, 5Pappas
Center of Neuro-Oncology, Department of Neurology,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, MA, United States, 6Department
of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
High levels of 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) represent the
hallmark metabolic alteration in mutant IDH gliomas. 2HG
has been proposed as an ideal biomarker to diagnose and
monitor treatment response of mutant IDH gliomas. We
show here newly that 3D MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI)
of 2HG is feasible clinically in glioma patients. A
novel 3D MRSI sequence was designed to edit reliably and
efficiently the 2HG levels. Results obtained serially in
mutant IDH glioma patients are shown.
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11:36 |
0288. |
An in-vivo 1H MRS study of
metabolic correlation in IDH1 vs. IDH2 mutated gliomas
Changho Choi1, Sandeep Ganji1,
Akshay Madan1, Zhongxu An1, and
Elizabeth Maher1
1UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas,
Texas, United States
Isocitrate dehydrogenases (IDH) 1 and 2 catalyze the
NADP+ dependent conversion of isocitrate to
Ą-ketoglutarate in the cytosol and mitochondria,
respectively. The mutations in these enzymes result in
the production of 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG). We have
investigated metabolic correlations in IDH1- vs.
IDH2-mutated gliomas (28 and 5 patients, respectively)
focusing on 2HG in vivo, using 1H MRS at 3T. Data
indicated 2HG levels were highly correlated with choline,
NAA, creatine and glutamate. The correlations were
stronger in IDH2 mutated gliomas than in IDH1 mutated
gliomas.
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11:48 |
0289. |
Towards Improved
Characterization of Brain Tumors by 23Na-MR
Neuroimaging at 7 Tesla
Armin Biller1,2, Jens Kleesiek3,
Jan Oliver Neumann3, Felix Sahm4,
Anne Dorothea Hertenstein3, and Armin Michael
Nagel5
1Neuroradiology, University of Heidelberg,
Heidelberg, Badem-Württemberg, Germany, 2Radiology,
German Cancer Research Center DKFZ, Heidelberg, Badem-Württemberg,
Germany, 3University
of Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, 4Neuropathology,
Baden-Württemberg, Germany, 5Medical
Physics in Radiology, German Cancer Research Center DKFZ,
Baden-Württemberg, Germany
In this study we demonstrate a robust correlation
between the Ki-67 proliferation index of brain tumor
cells and the relaxation weighted 23Na
contrasts (NaR and NaS). Both contrasts represent the
signal of ions with short relaxation times. The NaT
contrast, which reflects the tissue sodium
concentration, exhibited no association with
histopathology. Also, statistical analyses revealed no
correlation between the Ki-67 index and canonical 1H-MRI
including T1w gadolinium enhanced, T2w and FLAIR
imaging. These results emphasize the added benefit of 23Na-MRI
to conventional 1H
imaging in neurooncology. Of note, in contrast to 1H
neuroimaging in oncology 23Na-MRI
requires no contrast media.
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