Diagnostics (May 2022)

Quantitative Sodium (<sup>23</sup>Na) MRI in Pediatric Gliomas: Initial Experience

  • Aashim Bhatia,
  • Vincent Kyu Lee,
  • Yongxian Qian,
  • Michael J. Paldino,
  • Rafael Ceschin,
  • Jasmine Hect,
  • James M. Mountz,
  • Dandan Sun,
  • Gary Kohanbash,
  • Ian F. Pollack,
  • Regina I. Jakacki,
  • Fernando Boada,
  • Ashok Panigrahy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12051223
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 1223

Abstract

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Background: 23Na MRI correlates with tumor proliferation, and studies in pediatric patients are lacking. The purpose of the study: (1) to compare total sodium concentration (TSC) between pediatric glioma and non-neoplastic brain tissue using 23Na MRI; (2) compare tissue conspicuity of bound sodium concentration (BSC) using 23Na MRI dual echo relative to TSC imaging. Methods: TSC was measured in: (1) non-neoplastic brain tissues and (2) three types of manually segmented gliomas (diffuse intrinsic brainstem glioma (DIPG), recurrent supratentorial low-grade glioma (LGG), and high-grade glioma (HGG)). In a subset of patients, serial changes in both TSC and BSC (dual echo 23Na MRI) were assessed. Results: Twenty-six pediatric patients with gliomas (median age of 12.0 years, range 4.9–23.3 years) were scanned with 23Na MRI. DIPG treated with RT demonstrated higher TSC values than the uninvolved infratentorial tissues (p p p 23Na MRI suppressed the sodium signal within both CSF and necrotic foci. Conclusion: Quantitative 23Na MRI of pediatric gliomas demonstrates a range of values that are higher than non-neoplastic tissues. Dual echo 23Na MRI of BCS improves tissue conspicuity relative to TSC imaging.

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