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Original article
Differentiation between brain tumor recurrence and radiation injury using perfusion, diffusion-weighted imaging and MR spectroscopy

Barbara Bobek-Billewicz
,
Gabriela Stasik-Pres
,
Henryk Majchrzak
,
Łukasz Zarudzki

Folia Neuropathologica 2010; 48 (2): 81-92
Online publish date: 2010/07/01
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Introduction

Surgery and radiotherapy are the main methods of a treatment in patients with gliomas. Concomitant radiochemotherapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy has now become the standard of treatment for patients with malignant gliomas. Postoperative radiotherapy in patients with gliomas improves the results of treatment, but it brings some side effects to the brain [8,14,35,37,39]. Three types of side effects are differen-tiated taking into account the time of its occurrence: acute (early), subacute (early delayed), late (late de-layed) [24,26,38].
Radionecrosis is the end point of radiation injury and the worst adverse effect of the radiotherapy. Radionecrosis generally occurs 3-12 months after radiotherapy but can occur up to years or even deca-des afterwards. Its developement depends on irra-diated brain volume, dose of the radiotherapy and concomitant chemotherapy. The incidence of radionecrosis is higher in patients treated with radiochemotherapy than patients treated with radiotherapy alone. Generally, reported incidence of radionecrosis ranges from 2 to 24% [4,12,18,26,35]. Data on the incidence of radiation necrosis are rather underestimated because of the difficulty in radiological differentiation vital tumor tissue and radionecrosis and rare surgery and biopsies in these patients.
Stereotactic biopsy, if performed, should be imaged-guided biopsy. And because of this neuroimaging plays extremely important role in monitoring the therapy and recurrence of brain tumors. Intralesion heterogeneity of the recurrence which can consist in different proportions from the vital tumor tissue and radionerosis decreases accuracy of biopsy. Advanced MR techniques are essential for taking a representative sampling during biopsy or even it could replace this invasive technique.
Conventional MR techniques, such as T2-weighted and gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted imaging, have limitations in discriminating tumor recurrence and treatment-induced injury. Radiological pattern of radionecrosis with conventional MR techniques is frequently indistinguishable from that of tumor recurrence. Both lesions are heterogenous mainly hiperintensive on T2-weighted images and show strong, often heterogenous contrast enhancement with surrounding edema and mass effect. Standard imaging recurrence/progression criteria are: increased area of gadolinium uptake on MRI or the appearance of new contrast enhacement lesions but radiation necrosis often looks in the same way.
Advanced MRI techniques and PET examination allow the analysis of tumor or necrotic tissue properties and provide more accurate information on its nature. But differentiation between tumor recurrence/vital tumor tissue and radionecrosis based on diagnostic imaging is still very difficult or sometimes impossible [4-6,18,27,43].
The aim of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic effectiveness of perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI), diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1HMRS) in the differentiation of the tumor recurrence from radiation related injury.

Material and methods
Material
The retrospective analysis comprised 11 contrast-enhancing lesions observed in 8 patients (5 females, 3 males, range of age 23-68 years) treated for gliomas with radiotherapy (6/8 patients) or radiochemo­thera-py with Temozolomide (2/8 patients).
In 2 patients contrast-enhancing lesions were multifocal and appeared in different time during follow-up. All patients had undergone surgical excision of the tumor which histological examination results were as follows: Glioblastoma multiforme WHO IV – 2, Astrocytoma anaplasticum WHO III – 5, Astrocytoma diffusum WHO II/III – 1 (Table I). The time from the end of radiation therapy to appearance of contrast-enhancing lesions ranged from 3 to 70 months (Table I). 5 out of 11 contrast-enhancing lesions were tumor recurrences (those results were histopatho-logically verified). 6 out of 11 contrast-enhancing lesions were radiation-related injuries (3/6 were histopathologically verified as radionecrosis and 3/6 disappeared completely during follow-up without any treatment and were classified as non-neoplastic lesion/radiation-related injury). The clinical characteri-sation of the analysed group is presented in Table I.
Methods
The MR examinations were performed on 1.5T (Avanto, Siemens) or 3.0T (Achieva, Philips) scanner with the standard head coil.

Conventional MR imaging
Conventional MR imaging consisted of T2-weigh-ted images, FLAIR (fluid-attenuated inversion reco-very), T1-weighted images before and after CE (con-trast enhancement).
1.5T: T1-SE (TR/TE 458/14 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.5 mm, FOV 207 × 230 mm, matrix 288 × 320), T1-MPRAGE with CE (TR/TE 1160/4.2 ms, Thk/gap 0.9/0.0 mm, FOV 230 × 230 mm, matrix 256 × 256), T2-TSE (TR/TE 4240/92 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.0 mm, FOV 234 × 250 mm, matrix 360 × 512), T2-FLAIR (TI = 2371 ms, TR/TE 8000/89 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.0 mm, FOV 199 × 250 mm, matrix 204 × 256).
3.0T: T1-SE (TR/TE 450/13 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.0 mm, FOV 230 × 230 mm, matrix 256/512, T1-3D TFE with CE (TR/TE 6.4/2.3 ms, Thk/gap 1.0/0.0 mm, FOV 256 × 256 mm, matrix 256/256), T2-TSE (TR/TE 3000/80 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.0 mm, FOV 230 × 184 mm, matrix 306/512), T2-FLAIR (TI = 2500 ms, TR/TE 9000/125 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.0 mm, FOV 230 × 182 mm, matrix 217/512).

Perfusion-Weighted Imaging (PWI)

1.5T: EPI spin echo (TR/TE 1400/30 ms, Thk/gap 5.0/1.5 mm, FOV 230 × 230 mm, matrix 128 × 128). 60 data sets were acquired with a time resolution 1 per data set.
3.0T: EPI gradient echo (TR/TE 16/24 ms, flip 7° slice thickness 4.0 mm, intersection gap 0.0 mm, matrix 64 × 128 pixels). 60 data sets were acquired with a time resolution 1 per data set.
Paramagnetic gadolinium based contrast medium (0.1 mmoL/kg) was injected at with a rate 6.0 mL/sec, followed by administration of 20 mL bolus of saline.
rCBV (relative cerebral blood volume) maps were calculated by postprocessing software delivered by MR systems producer.
Mean and maximum rCBV values of each contrast-enhancing lesion were calculated. rCBV was calcula-ted as follows:
rCBVmean – region of interest (ROI) covered the contrast-enhancing lesion except necrotic part;
rCBVmax – ROI in contrast-enhancing lesion was placed within the highest rCBV after visual asses-sment of the color map.
These values were normalized to normal appearing white matter.
rCBVnawm – ROI in normal appearing white matter (nawm) was placed within normal appearing white matter in the contralateral hemisphere.
Mean normalized rCBVmax = rCBVmax/rCBVnawm and mean normalized rCBVmean = rCBVmean/ rCBVnawm were analysed. ROIs area ranged from 0.2 to 0.4 cm2.

Diffusion-Weighted Imaging (DWI)

1.5T: EPI spin-echo (TR/TE 3100/99 ms, β = 0.1000 mm2/s, FOV 230 × 230 mm; matrix 192 × 192 pixels, slice thickness 5.0 mm, intersection gap 1.0 mm).
3.0T: EPI spin-echo (TR/TE, 3080/70 ms, β = 0.1000 mm2/s, matrix 112 × 256 pixels, slice thickness 4.0 mm, intersection gap 1.0 mm).
ADC (Apparent Diffusion Coefficient) maps were calculated by postprocessing software delivered by MR systems producer.
ADCce – ROI in contrast-enhancing lesion was placed within solid part of the lesion, within the lowest signal intensity after visual assessment of the ADC map.
ADCnawm – ROI in normal appearing white matter was placed within normal appearing white matter in the contralateral hemisphere.
ROIs area ranged from 0.2-0.4 cm2. Mean norma-lized ADC = ADCce/ADCnawm ratio and mean ADCce were analysed.

Proton MR spectroscopy (1HMRS)

1.5T: 3D CSI SE: long TE (TR/TE 1300/135 ms), short TE (TR/TE 1300/30 ms), voxel size 10 × 15 × 10 mm, and SVS SE: long TE (TR/TE 1500/135 ms), short TE (TR/TE 1300/30 ms), voxel size 15 × 15 × 15 mm.
3.0T: 3D CSI PRESS: long TE (TR/TE 1083/288 ms), short TE (TR/TE 1083/35 ms), voxel size 15 × 15 × 12 mm, SVS SE: long TE (TR/TE 1083/288 ms), short TE (TR/TE 1083/35 ms), voxel size 10 × 10 × 10 mm.
Only those voxels which were in solid part of the contrast-enhancing lesion were analysed. MR spectroscopy data were evaluated using LC Model version 6.1-4F. Cho/Cr, Cho/NAA ratios were calculated, Lac and Lip were marked as “+” or “–”, if standard deviation of their concentrations were less than 20%. Two contrast-enhancing lesions (number I.2 and II.4) lacked of MR spectroscopy.

Statistical analysis

Continuous parameters with normal distribution were presented as mean ± standard deviation (SD). The normal distribution of parameters was tested with Shapiro-Wilk test. Mean differences were tested between two groups (Group I – contrast-enhancing lesions which were recurrent gliomas, Group II – contrast-enhancing lesions which were radiation injuries). The significance of mean dif-ferences was tested with a t-Student test. Con-tinuous parameters which were located into groups smaller than 5 were compared with the 2 test. Statistically significant p-levels were assumed as < 0.05 (two-sided). Statistical calculations and analyses were performed with Statistical PL software version 6.1 by StatSoft, Inc.

Results

Mean normalized rCBV values are presented in Table II. Mean normalized rCBVmax and rCBVmean normalized rCBVmean were significantly higher in the recurrent gliomas group than in the radiation injury one. Normalized rCBVmax: 2.44 ± 0.73 for tumor rec-curence vs. 0.78 ± 0.46 for radiation injury; p < 0.001 (Fig. 1), and normalized rCVBmean: 1.46 ± 0.49 for tumor reccurence vs. 0.49 ± 0.38 for radiation injury; p < 0.004 (Fig. 2). It was observed that normalized rCBVmax higher than 1.7 and normalized rCBVmean higher than 1.25 is highly indicative for recurrent glioma whereas normalized rCBVmax lower than 1.0 and normalized rCBVmean lower than 0.5 is highly indicative for radiation injury.
Neither mean ADCce: 1.06 ± 0.18 × 10-3 mm2/s for tumor recurrence vs. 1.13 ± 0.13 × 10-3 mm2/s for radiation injury; p = 0.51 nor mean normalized ADC: 1.55 ± 0.39 × 10-3 mm2/s for tumor reccurence vs. 1.55 ± 0.18 × 10-3 mm2/s for radiation injury; p = 0.98) were not statistically significant different between two analysed groups. Mean ADC values are presented in Table III and Figs. 3 and 4.
Results of MR spectroscopy are presented in Table IV. Neither median Cho/Cr ratio (2.16 min/max [1.67-3.15] for tumor recurrence vs. 1.34 min/max [1.13-2.37] for radiation injury; p = 0.15) nor median Cho/NAA ratio (1.9 min/max [0.86-2.36] for tumor rec-curence vs. 2.11 min/max [0.97 vs. 2.87] for radiation injury; p = 0.51) were not statistically significant dif-ferent between two analysed groups (Figs. 5-6).

Discussion

Differentiating vital tumor tissue (tumor regrowth/ recurrence) from radiation injury remains an impor-tant and common issue in neurooncology. Surgery and radiotherapy are the main methods of a treatment in patients with gliomas. Concomitant radiochemo-therapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy has now become the standard of treatment for patients with malignant gliomas. Postoperative radiotherapy in patients with gliomas improves the results of treatment, but it brings some side effects to the brain [8,14,35,37,39]. Among those radionecrosis – as the end point of radiation injury is the worst. Its developement depends on irradiated brain volume, dose of the radiotherapy and concomitant chemo-therapy.
Although radiological features commonly seen in radionecrosis has been described (location in periventricular white matter, corpus callosum and distant from the site of primary tumor, soap bubble, Swiss cheese pattern), differential diagnosis from tumor recurrence based on conventional MR is still impossible [10,18,19], because of the likeness of the images. Contrast-enhancing lesions occur within residual tumor or tumor recurrence and also within radiation injuries with or without necrosis [18,25,48]. Both lesions (tumor and radionecrosis) are hete-rogenous, mainly hiperintensive on T2-weighted images and show strong, often heterogenous contrast enhancement with surrounding edema and mass effect. Both entities can increase in size or be stable over serial examinations. It is essential to remember that from clinical point of view the differentiation between tumor recurrence and radionecrosis has a pivotal role, because of the further treatment implications [4,18].
18 FDG PET/CT (18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT) is not a guarantee for reliable diagnosis either. Because of the high physiologic glucose metabolism in normal brain, one faces difficulties in detecting tumor and tumor recurrence. Radiation injuries (especially radionecrosis) are characterized with low FDG uptake. On the other hand small tumor size or its low metabolic activity can be a reason for false negative results. Further, increased FDG uptake in the area of radiation injury can be due to inflammatory processes, seizure activity, healing processes up to 3 months after surgery (false positive results). 18FDG PET/CT has sensitivity 81-86% and specificity 40-94% in differentiation between tumor recurrence and radiation injury [6]. Amino-acid PET e.c. 18F-FET PET (18F(fluoroethyl)-L-tyrosine) seems to be more useful in differential diagnosis. Popperl et al. proved that 18F-FET PET was able to distinguish between recurrent tumor and therapy-induced benign changes with 100% accuracy [6,27,43]. In such circumstances advanced MRI techniques (PWI, DWI, 1H-MRS) seem to be helpful in vital tumor tissue vs. benign radiation induced injury/radionecrosis defferentiation.
Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast Enhanced Perfu-sion MRI (DSCE-MRI, PWI) is based on rapid T2 or T2*-weighted imaging of the first pass of gadolinium-based contrast material. It gives access to information on the capillary microcirculation of tissue and reflects tissue microvascular density (MVD) by measuring relative cerebral blood volume [28,34,46]. The most efficacies, among parametres obtained in PWI, in assessing brain tumors or treatment effectiveness has rCBV [10,19]. Angiogenesis in recurrence/growth tumor lead to raise capillary perfusion and MVD what is seen as an increase of rCBV [16,29]. Tumor’s vessels in comparison to normal ones are characterized by increased tortuosity, lack of maturity and increased permeability. MVD and rCBV are decreased in radiation necrosis which mainly consists of ischemic changes because radiotherapy induces endothelial cell damage and small vessel injury [16,29]. Assuming that contrast- enhancing lesion contain pure neoplastic tissue or pure necrotic one, these two entities should be distinguishable by using PWI. But such situation is extremely rare. The areas of recurrence tumor comprised of mixture of neoplastic and necrotic tissue in at least 33% cases [12,26,28]. Because of this overlap of the rCBV between tumor recurrence and radiation injury is predictable. Not only irradiated brain tissue but also irradiated tumor is not the same as before treatment. It was stated [11,42] that normalized rCBV ratios (rCBV[tumor]/rCBV[contralateral tissue]) in the recurrent glioblastoma were significantly lower than those in the initial glioblastoma in the same patients. The usefulness of rCBV in discrimination between tumor reccurence and radiation injury has been evaluated by the same authors. They analysed contrast-enhancing lesions in 20 patients treated with postoperative radiochemotherapy or chemotherapy for gliomas. Estimation showed two thresholds for normalized rCBV ratios – 2.6 and 0.6, respectively. rCBV higher than 2.6 within contrast-enhancing lesions was highly indicative for tumor recurrence, whereas threshold lower than 0.6 was highly indicative for radiation injury. Values between those two thresholds might have indicated mixture of pathological processes and for better assessment other exa-minations should have been performed [41,42]. Recently Hu et all. presented a threshold of 0.71 of rCBV with a sensitivity of 91.7% and a specificity of 100% for the best differential diagnosis [16]. Authors of these analysis observed very small overlap between two discussed pathological processes only two tumors rCBV values (8.3% of all investigated samples) fell within the posttreatment radiation effect group range. Authors suggested that such efficient results may be due to preload contrast medium bolus for correctin T1-weighted errors and normalization rCBV to average grey matter and white matter and not only to white matter [16]. Barajas et al. found that the mean and maximum rCBV values were significantly higher in the recurrent metastatic tumor group than radiation necrosis [3]. Noteworthy fact is that cutoff for rCBV value of 1.52 with a sensitivity of 91.30% and a spe-cificity of 72.73% was characteristic for recurrent metastatic tumor whereas. rCBV values < 1.35 were only observed in enhancing regions, consistent with radiation necrosis. Our results show statistically significant difference in terms of rCBV between the tumor recurrence and the radiation injury group (nrCBVmax p < 0.001, nrCBVmean p < 0.005). Lesion no VIII 11 in our group was histopahologically verified as recurrent Anaplastic Astrocytoma (Fig. 7). In our group normalized rCBVmax over 1.7 and normalized rCBVmean over 1.25 characterized regrowth/recurrence, whereas normalized rCBVmax below 1.0 and nor-malized rCBVmean below 0.5 characterized radiation injury. Like in other authors’ results, the overlap between the two groups considering rCBV was also observed. Considering that the overlap is not high this method might be highly indicative for differential diagnosis. Further the overlap of the normalized rCBV between these two groups could have a few reasons, as it was stressed above the most important of these is heterogeneity of the recurrence tumor which often consist of tumor cells and necrosis. Additionally petechial hemorrhage induced by radiation may produce susceptibility artifacts and decrease the rCBV ratios if it occures within tumor recurrence [41,42]. False negative results considering PWI can be similar to problems in FDG PET/CT – small size of tumor and its low metabolic activity. It was observed that within irradiated brain tissue many vessels are occluded but there are aneurysmal formation, teleangiectasias and profliferation of endothelial cells [13,17] what can lead to high perfusion within radiation induced injury/ radionecrosis and false positive results.
Extracellular water is the main object of investigation in diffusion imaging. Diffusion data provides indirect information about the structure surrounding these water molecules and is sensitive to microenvironment changes in the tumor and tissue. Quantitative assessment is expressed as ADC maps, which value gets higher if the ability of motion increases. In the opposite if the ability of the water molecules motion is decreased by e.c. the higher cellularity or cytotoxic edema existence, what is called diffusion restriction and what causes diminishing the ADC values. The validity of DWI has been already established in such disorders as acute brain ischemia or differentiation epidermoid vs. arachnoid cyst [33], tumor necrosis vs. abscess and others. Published data regarding ADC changes during the radiotherapy are ambiguous [7,22]. Hein et al. showed that ADC ratios (1.43 vs. 1.82*10-3 mm2/s) and mean ADC values (1.18 vs. 1.4*10-3 mm2/s) in the recurrence group is significantly lower than those of the nonrecurrence group [17]. Similar results presented Zeng et al. Authors stated that recurrence group showed mean ADC value and ADC ratio significantly lower than radiation injury group – 1.2 vs. 1.39*10-3 mm2/s, 1.42 vs. 1.69*10-3 mm2/s, respec-tively [49]. Interesting analysis presented Asao et al. Authors investigated 20 enhancing lesions in which 12 were recurrent tumors and 8 radiation injuries. The minimal, maximal, and mean values of each lesion were compared between these 2 groups. What is noteworthy only the maximal ADC values within each lesion were significantly lower for the recurrence group than for the necrosis one [2]. Our analysis revealed similar tendency to those results but without statistical significance. Contrary results presented Sundgren et al. [38] In their group, mean ADC values in the contrast-enhancing lesions were significantly higher for recurrent tumors in compa-rison with radiation injuries (1.27 vs. 1.12*10-3 mm2/s) [47]. It is considered that low ADC values in re-growth/recurrent tumor are the result of high-cell density, but microangiogenesis in the recurrent tumor can elevate ADC values [40]. On the other hand low ADC values in radiation injury could be a result of gliosis, fibrosis, macrophage invasion, de-myeliation, coagulative necrosis, but simple acellular necrosis, cystic necrosis, liquefactive necrosis elevate ADC values [49]. Lesion no II.5 in our group was histopahologically verified as coagulative necrosis (Fig. 8). Also, a great deal of recurrent tumors contains areas of necrosis. To sum up, pathological processes within recurrent tumor and radiation injury might lead to similar changes in diffusivity.
MR spectroscopy characterizes tissue in terms of chemical constitution. Taking into account different published reports one may suggest that tumor recurrence may be characterized by high Cho and low NAA levels, whereas radiation injury by low levels of all metabolites, except for lipids [1,9,13,20,23,32,36, 42,45,47,49]. Weybright et al. [47] in the group of 29 patients with gliomas treated with surgery and RT noted the highest mean Cho/Cr, Cho/NAA ratios for recurrent tumor, next radiation injury and normal-appearing white matter. Mean NAA/Cr ratio was the highest in normal-appearing white matter, followed by radiation injury, and recurrent tumor respectively [47]. Taylor et al. compared absolute concentrations of Cho, NAA and Cr in areas suspected for tumor regrowth or radionecrosis. Authors stated that although for recurrent tumor Cho increase and NAA decrease is highly characteristic, and in radioinjury low levels all these metabolites are seen, discriminant analysis suggested that the primary diagnostic information for differentiating radionecrosis from tumor lay in the normalized MRS peak areas for choline and creatine compounds [44]. According to Zeng et al. [49], Weybright et al. [47] and Schlemmer et al. [36] Cho/Cr ratio > 2 and Cho/NAA ratio > 2.5 in the contrast-enhancing lesions strongly indicate tumor regrowth or recurrence. Rabinov et al. [30] stated that the level of Cho at the biopsy site (within contrast-enhancing lesion) to normal creatine level with the treshold greater than 1.3 is the criterion for tumor. Lipids correspond to necrosis which is often visible either within tumor or radiation injury/ necrosis. That is the cause that lipids can be detected either in tumor recurrence or radiation injury [31]. Rock et al. [32]. Indicated Lac + Lip/Cho ratio = 0.75 as threshold characteristic for tumor recurrence 7 times more often than in radiation injur. Our analysis did not reveal any statistically significant difference between the recurrent gliomas group and radiation injury one in terms of Cho/Cr and Cho/NAA, which can be caused by the small group of analyzed patients. As it has been stated already in many of the enhancing lesions, often both tumor cells and radiation injury are present the results of spectroscopy in these cases are much less clear than those observed in cases of pure tumor or pure radiation necrosis.

Conclusions

Among the analyzed advanced neuroimaging methods PWI seems to be most reliable in diffe-rentiation between tumor regrowth/recurrence and radiation necrosis. In these results mean rCBV is a better differing factor than max rCBV. Proton MR spectroscopy and DWI do not differentiate analyzed groups with statistical significance, despite tendency to lower ADC values in recurrence group than in radiation injury one.

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