Amy C Gerrish, Luqman Malik, Charlotte Swain, Adam G Thomas, Timothy Jaspan, Rob A Dineen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: To establish diagnostic performance of a single axial T2-weighted sequence for detection of brain tumours in children with non-localizing symptoms, compared to a standard MRI protocol.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of children undergoing MRI brain imaging for suspected brain tumours with non-localizing symptoms over a 3-year period. Axial T2-weighted images were blindly reviewed by 2 experienced paediatric neuroradiologists. Primary analysis was calculation of diagnostic performance metrics for tumour identification using axial T2-weighted image only compared to the standard MRI protocol.
Results: For 312 children undergoing MRI brain during the study period, sensitivity and specificity for brain tumour detection based on axial T2-weighted images in children with non-localizing symptoms were 1.000 (95% CIs 0.598, 1.000) and 0.998 (95% CI 0.990, 0.999), respectively. Based on T2-weighted images alone, 50 patients (16%) were flagged as needing recall for further imaging compared to 14 (4.5%) recalled after the standard protocol.
Conclusions: Axial T2-weighted images have high sensitivity and specificity for detection of brain tumours in children with non-localizing symptoms but are associated with increased imaging recall rates. Prospective evaluation of this approach to identify patients requiring more comprehensive imaging is warranted.
Advances in knowledge: A truncated MRI protocol with single axial T2-weighted sequence has high diagnostic performance for brain tumour detection in children with non-localizing features. Radiologists can be reassured that a child with this presentation who is unable to complete the full MRI scan protocol is very unlikely to have a brain tumour missed provided an axial T2-weighted sequence is obtained.
期刊介绍:
BJR is the international research journal of the British Institute of Radiology and is the oldest scientific journal in the field of radiology and related sciences.
Dating back to 1896, BJR’s history is radiology’s history, and the journal has featured some landmark papers such as the first description of Computed Tomography "Computerized transverse axial tomography" by Godfrey Hounsfield in 1973. A valuable historical resource, the complete BJR archive has been digitized from 1896.
Quick Facts:
- 2015 Impact Factor – 1.840
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- ISSN: 0007-1285
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