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Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies

Objective: The recent FDA approval of the first 7T MRI scanner for clinical diagnostic use in October 2017 will likely increase the utilization of 7T for epilepsy presurgical evaluation. This study aims at accessing the radiological and clinical value of 7T in patients with pharmacoresistant focal e...

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Autores principales: Wang, Z. Irene, Oh, Se-Hong, Lowe, Mark, Larvie, Mykol, Ruggieri, Paul, Hill, Virginia, Statsevych, Volodymyr, Moon, Doksu, Lee, Jonathan, Emch, Todd, Bena, James, Blümcke, Ingmar, Bingaman, William, Gonzalez-Martinez, Jorge A., Najm, Imad, Jones, Stephen E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7960771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33737901
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.591586
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author Wang, Z. Irene
Oh, Se-Hong
Lowe, Mark
Larvie, Mykol
Ruggieri, Paul
Hill, Virginia
Statsevych, Volodymyr
Moon, Doksu
Lee, Jonathan
Emch, Todd
Bena, James
Blümcke, Ingmar
Bingaman, William
Gonzalez-Martinez, Jorge A.
Najm, Imad
Jones, Stephen E.
author_facet Wang, Z. Irene
Oh, Se-Hong
Lowe, Mark
Larvie, Mykol
Ruggieri, Paul
Hill, Virginia
Statsevych, Volodymyr
Moon, Doksu
Lee, Jonathan
Emch, Todd
Bena, James
Blümcke, Ingmar
Bingaman, William
Gonzalez-Martinez, Jorge A.
Najm, Imad
Jones, Stephen E.
author_sort Wang, Z. Irene
collection PubMed
description Objective: The recent FDA approval of the first 7T MRI scanner for clinical diagnostic use in October 2017 will likely increase the utilization of 7T for epilepsy presurgical evaluation. This study aims at accessing the radiological and clinical value of 7T in patients with pharmacoresistant focal epilepsy and 3T-visible lesions. Methods: Patients with pharmacoresistant focal epilepsy were included if they had a lesion on pre-operative standard-of-care 3T MRI and also a 7T research MRI. An epilepsy protocol was used for the acquisition of the 7T MRI. Prospective visual analysis of 7T MRI was performed by an experienced board-certified neuroradiologist and communicated to the patient management team. The clinical significance of the additional 7T findings was assessed by intracranial EEG (ICEEG) ictal onset, surgical resection, post-operative seizure outcome and histopathology. A subset of lesions were demarked with arrows for subsequent, retrospective comparison between 3T and 7T by 7 neuroradiologists using a set of quantitative scales: lesion presence, conspicuity, boundary, gray-white tissue contrast, artifacts, and the most helpful sequence for diagnosis. Conger's kappa for multiple raters was performed for chance-adjusted agreement statistics. Results: A total of 47 patients were included, with the main pathology types of focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), hippocampal sclerosis, periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH), tumor and polymicrogyria (PMG). 7T detected additional smaller lesions in 19% (9/47) of patients, who had extensive abnormalities such as PMG and PVNH; however, these additional findings were not necessarily epileptogenic. 3T−7T comparison by the neuroradiologist team showed that lesion conspicuity and lesion boundary were significantly better at 7T (p < 0.001), particularly for FCD, PVNH and PMG. Chance-adjusted agreement was within the fair range for lesion presence, conspicuity and boundary. Gray-white contrast was significantly improved at 7T (p < 0.001). Significantly more artifacts were encountered at 7T (p < 0.001). Significance: For patients with 3T-visible lesions, 7T MRI may better elucidate the extent of multifocal abnormalities such as PVNH and PMG, providing potential targets to improve ICEEG implantation. Patients with FCD, PVNH and PMG would likely benefit the most from 7T due to improved lesion conspicuity and boundary. Pathologies in the antero–inferior temporal regions likely benefit less due to artifacts.
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spelling pubmed-79607712021-03-17 Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies Wang, Z. Irene Oh, Se-Hong Lowe, Mark Larvie, Mykol Ruggieri, Paul Hill, Virginia Statsevych, Volodymyr Moon, Doksu Lee, Jonathan Emch, Todd Bena, James Blümcke, Ingmar Bingaman, William Gonzalez-Martinez, Jorge A. Najm, Imad Jones, Stephen E. Front Neurol Neurology Objective: The recent FDA approval of the first 7T MRI scanner for clinical diagnostic use in October 2017 will likely increase the utilization of 7T for epilepsy presurgical evaluation. This study aims at accessing the radiological and clinical value of 7T in patients with pharmacoresistant focal epilepsy and 3T-visible lesions. Methods: Patients with pharmacoresistant focal epilepsy were included if they had a lesion on pre-operative standard-of-care 3T MRI and also a 7T research MRI. An epilepsy protocol was used for the acquisition of the 7T MRI. Prospective visual analysis of 7T MRI was performed by an experienced board-certified neuroradiologist and communicated to the patient management team. The clinical significance of the additional 7T findings was assessed by intracranial EEG (ICEEG) ictal onset, surgical resection, post-operative seizure outcome and histopathology. A subset of lesions were demarked with arrows for subsequent, retrospective comparison between 3T and 7T by 7 neuroradiologists using a set of quantitative scales: lesion presence, conspicuity, boundary, gray-white tissue contrast, artifacts, and the most helpful sequence for diagnosis. Conger's kappa for multiple raters was performed for chance-adjusted agreement statistics. Results: A total of 47 patients were included, with the main pathology types of focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), hippocampal sclerosis, periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH), tumor and polymicrogyria (PMG). 7T detected additional smaller lesions in 19% (9/47) of patients, who had extensive abnormalities such as PMG and PVNH; however, these additional findings were not necessarily epileptogenic. 3T−7T comparison by the neuroradiologist team showed that lesion conspicuity and lesion boundary were significantly better at 7T (p < 0.001), particularly for FCD, PVNH and PMG. Chance-adjusted agreement was within the fair range for lesion presence, conspicuity and boundary. Gray-white contrast was significantly improved at 7T (p < 0.001). Significantly more artifacts were encountered at 7T (p < 0.001). Significance: For patients with 3T-visible lesions, 7T MRI may better elucidate the extent of multifocal abnormalities such as PVNH and PMG, providing potential targets to improve ICEEG implantation. Patients with FCD, PVNH and PMG would likely benefit the most from 7T due to improved lesion conspicuity and boundary. Pathologies in the antero–inferior temporal regions likely benefit less due to artifacts. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7960771/ /pubmed/33737901 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.591586 Text en Copyright © 2021 Wang, Oh, Lowe, Larvie, Ruggieri, Hill, Statsevych, Moon, Lee, Emch, Bena, Blümcke, Bingaman, Gonzalez-Martinez, Najm and Jones. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neurology
Wang, Z. Irene
Oh, Se-Hong
Lowe, Mark
Larvie, Mykol
Ruggieri, Paul
Hill, Virginia
Statsevych, Volodymyr
Moon, Doksu
Lee, Jonathan
Emch, Todd
Bena, James
Blümcke, Ingmar
Bingaman, William
Gonzalez-Martinez, Jorge A.
Najm, Imad
Jones, Stephen E.
Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title_full Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title_fullStr Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title_full_unstemmed Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title_short Radiological and Clinical Value of 7T MRI for Evaluating 3T-Visible Lesions in Pharmacoresistant Focal Epilepsies
title_sort radiological and clinical value of 7t mri for evaluating 3t-visible lesions in pharmacoresistant focal epilepsies
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7960771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33737901
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.591586
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