Publication | Open Access
Assessing Response to Radiation Therapy Treatment of Bone Metastases: Short-Term Followup of Radiation Therapy Treatment of Bone Metastases with Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging
14
Citations
11
References
2014
Year
Oncologic ImagingRadiation Therapy TreatmentOsteoporosisTreatment VerificationMagnetic Resonance ImagingOligometastatic PatientsRadiation MedicineRadiation OncologyRadiation Medicine ImagingRadiologyHealth SciencesRadiation TherapyMedical ImagingRadiological SciencesRadionuclide TherapyNormal Bone MarrowMedicineBone MetastasesRadiologic ImagingShort-term FollowupMri-guided Radiation TherapyBone ImagingResonanceOncologySkeletal Imaging
This study examined the usefulness of diffusion-weighted (DW) Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in monitoring bone metastases response to radiation therapy in 15 oligometastatic patients. For each metastasis, both mean apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) changes and high b -value DW metastasis/muscle signal intensity ratio (SIR) variations were evaluated at 30 ± 5 days and 60 ± 7 days after the end of treatment. On baseline DW-MRI, all bone metastases were hyperintense and had signal intensities higher than normal bone marrow on calculated ADC maps. At follow-up evaluations, 4 patterns of response were identified: (I) decreased high b -value DW SIR associated with increased mean ADC (83.3% of cases); (II) increased mean ADC with no change of high b -value DW SIR (10% of cases); (III) decreased both high b -value DW SIR and mean ADC (3.3% of cases); (IV) a reduction in mean ADC associated with an increase in high b -value DW SIR compared to pretreatment values (3.3% of cases). Patterns (I) and (II) suggested a good response to therapy; pattern (III) was classified as indeterminate, while pattern (IV) was suggestive of disease progression. This pattern approach may represent a useful tool in the differentiation between treatment-induced necrosis and highly cellular residual tumor.
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