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Amide proton transfer imaging of adult diffuse gliomas: correlation with histopathological grades

382

Citations

28

References

2013

Year

TLDR

Amide proton transfer (APT) imaging is a novel molecular MRI technique that detects endogenous mobile proteins and peptides via chemical exchange saturation transfer. The study prospectively evaluated whether APT imaging can predict the histological grade of adult diffuse gliomas. APT MRI was performed on a 3‑T scanner using 2‑second saturation across ±6 ppm offsets, with δB0 correction, and SI quantified as MTR asymmetry at 3.5 ppm from ROIs drawn by two neuroradiologists in solid tumor regions. APT SI rose progressively with glioma grade (2.1 % II, 3.2 % III, 4.1 % IV), differed significantly between all grade pairs, correlated positively with Ki‑67 labeling index and cell density, and was higher in tumors with necrosis, indicating that APT imaging can predict histopathological grades of adult diffuse gliomas.

Abstract

Amide proton transfer (APT) imaging is a novel molecular MRI technique to detect endogenous mobile proteins and peptides through chemical exchange saturation transfer. We prospectively assessed the usefulness of APT imaging in predicting the histological grade of adult diffuse gliomas.Thirty-six consecutive patients with histopathologically proven diffuse glioma (48.1 ± 14.7 y old, 16 males and 20 females) were included in the study. APT MRI was conducted on a 3T clinical scanner and was obtained with 2 s saturation at 25 saturation frequency offsets ω = -6 to +6 ppm (step 0.5 ppm). δB0 maps were acquired separately for a point-by-point δB0 correction. APT signal intensity (SI) was defined as magnetization transfer asymmetry at 3.5 ppm: magnetization transfer ratio (MTR)asym = (S[-3.5 ppm] - S[+3.5 ppm])/S0. Regions of interest were carefully placed by 2 neuroradiologists in solid parts within brain tumors. The APT SI was compared with World Health Organization grade, Ki-67 labeling index (LI), and cell density.The mean APT SI values were 2.1 ± 0.4% in grade II gliomas (n = 8), 3.2 ± 0.9% in grade III gliomas (n = 10), and 4.1 ± 1.0% in grade IV gliomas (n = 18). Significant differences in APT intensity were observed between grades II and III (P < .05) and grades III and IV (P < .05), as well as between grades II and IV (P < .001). There were positive correlations between APT SI and Ki-67 LI (P = .01, R = 0.43) and between APT SI and cell density (P < .05, R = 0.38). The gliomas with microscopic necrosis showed higher APT SI than those without necrosis (P < .001).APT imaging can predict the histopathological grades of adult diffuse gliomas.

References

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