articlePubMedApr 1, 2006GREEN OA

Relative cerebral blood volume maps corrected for contrast agent extravasation significantly correlate with glioma tumor grade, whereas uncorrected maps do not.

Rhode Island Hospital

PubMed
Indexed inpubmed

Abstract

Methods

We performed dynamic T2*-weighted perfusion MR imaging on 43 patients with a cerebral glioma after prebolus gadolinium diethylene triamine penta-acetic acid administration to diminish competing extravasation-induced T1 effects. The rCBV was computed from non-necrotic enhancing tumor regions by integrating the relaxivity-time data, with and without contrast extravasation correction by using a linear fitting algorithm, and was normalized to contralateral brain. We determined the statistical correlation between corrected and uncorrected normalized rCBV and histopathologic tumor grade with the Spearman rank correlation test.

Results

Eleven, 9, and 23 patients had WHO grades II, III, and IV glioma, respectively. Mean uncorrected normalized rCBVs were 1.53, 2.51, and 2.14 (grade II, III, and IV). Corrected normalized rCBVs were 1.52, 2.84, and 3.96. Mean absolute discrepancies between uncorrected and corrected rCBVs were 2% (0%-15%), 16% (0%-106%), and 74% (0%-411%). The correlation between corrected rCBV and tumor grade was significant (0.60; P

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648
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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Cerebral blood volume
  • Extravasation
  • Glioma
  • Nuclear medicine
  • Perfusion
  • Spearman's rank correlation coefficient
  • Blood volume
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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