AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create and evaluate a magnetic resonance imaging (MR) strategy to differentiate between various types of intraaxial brain masses, using histology or clinical diagnosis as the reference.
  • The research analyzed data from 111 patients, focusing on different types of brain masses such as primary neoplasms, abscesses, lymphomas, and others, and developed a comprehensive MR imaging approach combining multiple techniques.
  • The findings showed high accuracy (90%), sensitivity (97%), and specificity (67%) in differentiating neoplastic from non-neoplastic diseases, with strong performance in identifying high-grade versus low-grade neoplasms and other specific conditions.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To develop and retrospectively determine the accuracy of a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging strategy to differentiate intraaxial brain masses, with histologic findings or clinical diagnosis as the reference standard.

Materials And Methods: The study was HIPAA compliant and was approved by the institutional review board. A waiver of informed consent was obtained. A strategy was developed on the basis of conventional MR imaging, diffusion-weighted MR imaging, perfusion MR imaging, and proton MR spectroscopy to classify intraaxial masses as low-grade primary neoplasms, high-grade primary neoplasms, metastatic neoplasms, abscesses, lymphomas, tumefactive demyelinating lesions (TDLs), or encephalitis. The strategy was evaluated by using data from 111 patients (46 women, 65 men; mean age, 48.9 years) with imaging results available on a departmental picture archiving and communication system from a 5-year search period. Bayesian statistics of the strategy elements and three clinical tasks were calculated.

Results: Search results identified 44 patients with high-grade and 14 with low-grade primary neoplasms, 24 with abscesses, 12 with lymphoma, 11 with TDLs, five with metastases, and one with encephalitis who had undergone conventional and advanced MR imaging. However, only 40 patients (25 women, 15 men; mean age, 45 years) had undergone all studies and had data to allow completion of the entire strategy. Accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of the strategy, respectively, were 90%, 97%, and 67% for discrimination of neoplastic from nonneoplastic diseases, 90%, 88%, and 100% for discrimination of high-grade from low-grade neoplasms, and 85%, 84%, and 87% for discrimination of high-grade neoplasms and lymphoma from low-grade neoplasms and nonneoplastic diseases.

Conclusion: An integrated MR imaging-based strategy, which is accurate in differentiation of several intraaxial brain masses, was proposed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2432060493DOI Listing

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