ハヤシ モトヒロ
Hayashi Motohiro
林 基弘 所属 医学部 医学科(東京女子医科大学病院) 職種 教授 |
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論文種別 | 原著 |
言語種別 | 英語 |
査読の有無 | 査読あり |
表題 | Multivoxel proton MRS for differentiation of radiation-induced necrosis and tumor recurrence after gamma knife radiosurgery for brain metastases |
掲載誌名 | 正式名:Brain Tumor Pathol ISSNコード:14337398 |
掲載区分 | 国外 |
巻・号・頁 | 23(1),pp.19-27 |
著者・共著者 | CHERNOV Mikhail†, HAYASHI Motohiro, IZAWA Masahiro, USUKURA Masao, YOSHIDA Shigetoshi, ONO Yuko, MURAGAKI Yoshihiro, KUBO Osami, HORI Tomokatsu, TAKAKURA Kintomo |
発行年月 | 2006/04 |
概要 | Multivoxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was used for differentiation of radiation-induced necrosis and tumor recurrence after gamma knife radiosurgery for intracranial metastases in 33 consecutive cases. All patients presented with enlargement of the treated lesion, increase of perilesional brain edema, and aggravation or appearance of neurological signs and symptoms on average 9.3 +/- 4.9 months after primary treatment. Metabolic imaging defined four types of lesions: pure tumor recurrence (11 cases), partial tumor recurrence (11 cases), radiation-induced tumor necrosis (10 cases), and radiation-induced necrosis of the peritumoral brain (1 case). In 1 patient, radiation-induced tumor necrosis was diagnosed 9 months after radiosurgery; however, partial tumor recurrence was identified 6 months later. With the exception of midline shift, which was found to be more typical for radiation-induced necrosis (P<0.01), no one clinical, radiologic, or radiosurgical parameter either at the time of primary treatment or at the time of deterioration showed a statistically significant association with the type of the lesion. Proton MRS-based diagnosis was confirmed histologically in all surgically treated patients (7 cases) and corresponded well to the clinical course in others. In conclusion, multivoxel proton MRS is an effective diagnostic modality for identification of radiation-induced necrosis and tumor recurrence that can be used for monitoring of metabolic changes in intracranial neoplasms after radiosurgical treatment. It can be also helpful for differentiation of radiation-induced necrosis of the tumor and that of the peritumoral brain, which may have important clinical and medicolegal implications. |
DOI | 10.1007/s10014-006-0194-9 |
PMID | 18095115 |