Evaluación de la utilidad del coeficiente de difusión aparente en resonancia magnética para la diferenciación del grado tumoral de los tumores cerebrales pediátricos

Male Adolescent Brain Neoplasms Clinical Neurology Infant Diagnosis, Differential 03 medical and health sciences Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging 0302 clinical medicine Child, Preschool Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted Humans Female Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system RC346-429 Child Neoplasm Staging Retrospective Studies
DOI: 10.1016/j.nrl.2014.12.003 Publication Date: 2015-02-07T20:01:23Z
ABSTRACT
The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in MRI seems to be related to cellularity in brain tumours. Its utility as a tool for distinguishing between histological types and tumour stages remains controversial.We retrospectively evaluated children diagnosed with CNS tumours between January 2008 and December 2013. Data collected were age, sex, histological diagnosis, and location of the tumour. We evaluated the ADC and ADC ratio and correlated those values with histological diagnoses.The study included 55 patients with a median age of 6 years. Histological diagnoses were pilocytic astrocytoma (40%), anaplastic ependymoma (16.4%), ganglioglioma (10.9%), glioblastoma (7.3%), medulloblastoma (5.5%), and other (20%). Tumours could also be classified as low-grade (64%) or high-grade (36%). Mean ADC was 1.3 for low-grade tumours and 0.9 for high-grade tumours (p=.004). Mean ADC ratios were 1.5 and 1.2 for low and high-grade tumours respectively (p=.025). There were no significant differences in ADC/ADC ratio between different histological types.ADC and ADC ratio may be useful in imaging-study based differential diagnosis of low and high-grade tumours, but they are not a substitute for an anatomical pathology study.
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