AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS) is a severe condition that poses challenges for diagnosis, and this study aimed to explore MR imaging features and their prognostic implications for affected patients.
  • The research analyzed MR images and clinical data of 23 AIFRS patients, revealing that most cases had extra-sinonasal involvement, with a particular focus on lesions showing a lack of contrast enhancement (LoCE) as a significant indicator of poor prognosis.
  • Findings indicated that LoCE correlated with necrosis caused by fungal presence and was the only independent factor predicting disease-specific mortality, suggesting that patients with LoCE had notably worse survival outcomes compared to those without it.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS) is a life-threatening disease that is difficult to diagnose. Its overall imaging features have not been evaluated and the prognostic impact is unclear. The purpose of our study was to present MR imaging features and their impact on prognosis of AIFRS.

Methods: MR images and clinical records of 23 patients with AIFRS were retrospectively evaluated to identify the imaging features and to determine the factors affecting patients' survival. A multivariable Cox proportional hazard model was used to estimate the hazard ratio of the prognostic factors, and Kaplan-Meier survival curves were compared by using a log-rank test.

Results: All cases showed extra-sinonasal involvement and the orbit was the most common (65.2%, 15/23) location. The lesion enhancement pattern was classified into lack of contrast enhancement (LoCE) (47.8%, 11/23) and homogeneous (34.8%, 8/23) and heterogeneous (17.4%, 4/23) enhancement. Although LoCE showed variable signal intensity (SI), homogeneously or heterogeneously enhancing lesions showed exclusively low SI (100%, 12/12) on T2WI. Among various clinical and imaging factors, LoCE was correlated with coagulation necrosis, probably provoked by numerous fungal hyphae, and was found to be a sole independent prognostic factor for disease-specific mortality (hazard ratio = 16.819; 95% CI, 1.646-171.841, p = 0.017). In addition, patients with LoCE showed worse survival than patients without LoCE (p = 0.008).

Conclusion: AIFRS showed frequent extra-sinonasal involvement and variable MR enhancement patterns. An enhancement pattern of LoCE was seen in about half of the cases and was a unique prognostic factor among the various clinico-radiologic factors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00234-018-2034-0DOI Listing

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