JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Cerebral blood volume measurements and proton MR spectroscopy in grading of oligodendroglial tumors.

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine whether perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) and proton MR spectroscopy (MRS) are useful in differentiating high- and low-grade oligodendroglial tumors.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: PWI and MRS studies of 22 patients with histologically proven oligodendroglioma or oligoastrocytoma (13 low-grade and nine anaplastic tumors) were retrospectively reviewed. PWI of 14 subjects was performed with a dynamic contrast-enhanced susceptibility-weighted echo-planar technique. Intratumoral relative cerebral blood volume ratio was calculated and normalized to the same value in contralateral normal-appearing white matter. Multivoxel MRS was performed with a point-resolved spectroscopy sequence at a TE of 135 milliseconds in 20 patients and with the addition of a TE of 30 seconds in 17 patients. MRS data were expressed as intratumoral metabolite ratios (choline to creatine [Cho/Cr], choline to N-acetyl aspartate, N-acetyl aspartate to creatine, and myoinositol to creatine).

RESULTS: Relative cerebral blood volume ratios were significantly different (p = 0.004) between low-grade (1.61 +/- 1.20) and high-grade tumors (5.45 +/- 1.96). The optimal relative cerebral blood volume ratio cutoff value in identification of anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors was 2.14. Analysis of MRS data showed significantly higher Cho/Cr ratios (p = 0.002) in high-grade than in low-grade tumors. A Cho/Cr ratio cutoff value of 2.33 had the highest accuracy in identification of high-grade tumors.

CONCLUSION: Relative cerebral blood volume measurement and MRS are helpful in differentiating low-grade from anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors.

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