MRI phenotypes of glioblastomas early after treatment are suggestive of overall patient survival

Bárbara Schmitz-Abecassis*, Linda Dirven, Janey Jiang, Jasmin A. Keller, Robert J.I. Croese, Daniëlle van Dorth, Rashid Ghaznawi, Ilse M.J. Kant, Martin J.B. Taphoorn, Matthias J.P. van Osch, Johan A.F. Koekkoek, Jeroen de Bresser

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

4 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background. Distinguishing true tumor progression (TP) from treatment-induced abnormalities (eg, pseudoprogression (PP) after radiotherapy) on conventional MRI scans remains challenging in patients with a glioblastoma. We aimed to establish brain MRI phenotypes of glioblastomas early after treatment by combined analysis of structural and perfusion tumor characteristics and assessed the relation with recurrence rate and overall survival time. Methods. Structural and perfusion MR images of 67 patients at 3 months post-radiotherapy were visually scored by a neuroradiologist. In total 23 parameters were predefined and used for hierarchical clustering analysis. Progression status was assessed based on the clinical course of each patient 9 months after radiotherapy (or latest available). Multivariable Cox regression models were used to determine the association between the phenotypes, recurrence rate, and overall survival. Results: We established 4 subgroups with significantly different tumor MRI characteristics, representing distinct MRI phenotypes of glioblastomas:TP and PP rates did not differ significantly between subgroups. Regression analysis showed that patients in subgroup 1 (characterized by having mostly small and ellipsoid nodular enhancing lesions with some hyper-perfusion) had a significant association with increased mortality at 9 months (HR: 2.6 (CI: 1.1–6.3); P = .03) with a median survival time of 13 months (compared to 22 months of subgroup 2). Conclusions. Our study suggests that distinct MRI phenotypes of glioblastomas at 3 months post-radiotherapy can be indicative of overall survival, but does not aid in differentiatingTP from PP.The early prognostic information our method provides might in the future be informative for prognostication of glioblastoma patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbervdad133
JournalNeuro-oncology advances
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'MRI phenotypes of glioblastomas early after treatment are suggestive of overall patient survival'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this