Volumetric and diffusion MRI longitudinal patterns in brain metastases after laser interstitial thermal therapy.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
European Radiology Pub Date : 2025-10-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-18 DOI:10.1007/s00330-025-11587-0
Francesco Sanvito, Jingwen Yao, Gianluca Nocera, Guowen Shao, Zexi Wang, Nicholas S Cho, Ashley Teraishi, Catalina Raymond, Kunal Patel, Nader Pouratian, Richard G Everson, Isaac Yang, Noriko Salamon, Won Kim, Benjamin M Ellingson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: To characterize MRI changes of brain metastases (BM) following laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT), particularly in lesions exhibiting durable response or early progression.

Materials and methods: Longitudinal scans from patients with LITT-treated BM were retrospectively analyzed. Treatment response was categorized as durable response, long-term disease control (i.e., stable at 1 year), stable disease < 1 year, or progression < 1 year. Volumetric and diffusion MRI changes after LITT were analyzed for each subregion (contrast-enhancing, central non-enhancing, whole lesion). Volumetric changes were modeled with bi-exponential fits in responding lesions and progressors.

Results: 295 MRI scans from 47 lesions across 42 patients (57.8 ± 14.3 years old, males:females 21:21) were analyzed. Overall, the post-LITT scan showed a lesion enlargement (p < 0.0001 for all subregions), more pronounced in the contrast-enhancing (CE) component (median = +77%, p < 0.0001), and a reduction in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) (p < 0.001), especially in the central non-CE component (median = -224 × 10-6 mm2/s, p < 0.0001), with no significant differences between responders and progressors. Based on mathematical modeling, the responding lesions shrank to half of the post-LITT size after 79.83 days (median "pseudo-half-life"), and the progressing lesions shrank for a median of 27 days (median time-to-growth) before regrowing. The estimated optimal timepoints for follow-up scans were 23 days and 125 days, yielding accuracy/specificity/sensitivity 0.82/1.0/0.55 in identifying progressing lesions (p < 0.01).

Conclusion: BM typically exhibit an early volume increase with diffusion restriction after LITT. Responders then show bi-exponential shrinkage with gradual diffusion increase. Progression can usually be detected only after 3-4 months, because earlier radiographic patterns may overlap with responding lesions.

Key points: Question Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) is an emerging local treatment for brain metastases, but the radiographic patterns following this treatment have not been thoroughly described. Findings Responding lesions showed a typical radiographic pattern with early volumetric enlargement and diffusion restriction (not exclusive of responders), followed by a bi-exponential shrinkage and diffusion elevation. Clinical relevance Being aware of the typical radiographic changes in brain metastases responding to LITT is informative for the interpretation of follow-up images. Early volumetric and diffusion changes (< 3-4 months) do not appear to be reliable markers to predict treatment success.

激光间质热治疗后脑转移瘤的体积和扩散MRI纵向模式。
目的:描述激光间质热治疗(LITT)后脑转移瘤(BM)的MRI变化,特别是那些表现出持久反应或早期进展的病变。材料和方法:回顾性分析litt治疗的BM患者的纵向扫描。治疗反应分为持续反应、长期疾病控制(即1年稳定)、疾病稳定< 1年或进展< 1年。分析LITT后各亚区(对比增强、中央非增强、整个病变)的体积和扩散MRI变化。体积变化用双指数拟合来模拟响应病变和进展。结果:分析了42例患者(57.8±14.3岁,男:女21:21)47个病变的295张MRI扫描图。总体而言,LITT后扫描显示病灶增大(p -6 mm2/s)。结论:LITT后BM通常表现为早期体积增大,弥散受限。应答者表现为双指数收缩,扩散逐渐增加。通常在3-4个月后才能发现进展,因为早期的x线图像可能与反应性病变重叠。激光间质热治疗(LITT)是一种新兴的局部脑转移治疗方法,但这种治疗后的放射学模式尚未得到充分的描述。反应性病变表现为典型的早期体积增大和扩散受限(不排除应答者),随后呈双指数收缩和扩散升高。了解LITT对脑转移瘤的典型影像学改变对后续影像的解释具有重要意义。早期体积和扩散变化(
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来源期刊
European Radiology
European Radiology 医学-核医学
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
8.50%
发文量
874
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: European Radiology (ER) continuously updates scientific knowledge in radiology by publication of strong original articles and state-of-the-art reviews written by leading radiologists. A well balanced combination of review articles, original papers, short communications from European radiological congresses and information on society matters makes ER an indispensable source for current information in this field. This is the Journal of the European Society of Radiology, and the official journal of a number of societies. From 2004-2008 supplements to European Radiology were published under its companion, European Radiology Supplements, ISSN 1613-3749.
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