Tomography (Mar 2023)

Spectroscopic MRI-Guided Proton Therapy in Non-Enhancing Pediatric High-Grade Glioma

  • Vicki Huang,
  • Abinand Rejimon,
  • Kartik Reddy,
  • Anuradha G. Trivedi,
  • Karthik K. Ramesh,
  • Alexander S. Giuffrida,
  • Robert Muiruri,
  • Hyunsuk Shim,
  • Bree R. Eaton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tomography9020051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
pp. 633 – 646

Abstract

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Radiation therapy (RT) is a critical part of definitive therapy for pediatric high-grade glioma (pHGG). RT is designed to treat residual tumor defined on conventional MRI (cMRI), though pHGG lesions may be ill-characterized on standard imaging. Spectroscopic MRI (sMRI) measures endogenous metabolite concentrations in the brain, and Choline (Cho)/N-acetylaspartate (NAA) ratio is a highly sensitive biomarker for metabolically active tumor. We provide a preliminary report of our study introducing a novel treatment approach of whole brain sMRI-guided proton therapy for pHGG. An observational cohort (c1 = 10 patients) receives standard of care RT; a therapeutic cohort (c2 = 15 patients) receives sMRI-guided proton RT. All patients undergo cMRI and sMRI, a high-resolution 3D whole-brain echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) sequence (interpolated resolution of 12 µL) prior to RT and at several follow-up timepoints integrated into diagnostic scans. Treatment volumes are defined by cMRI for c1 and by cMRI and Cho/NAA ≥ 2x for c2. A longitudinal imaging database is used to quantify changes in lesion and metabolite volumes. Four subjects have been enrolled (c1 = 1/c2 = 3) with sMRI imaging follow-up of 4–18 months. Preliminary data suggest sMRI improves identification of pHGG infiltration based on abnormal metabolic activity, and using proton therapy to target sMRI-defined high-risk regions is safe and feasible.

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