Vessel tortuosity and brain tumor malignancy: a blinded study

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2517122/
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Links to Media http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2517122/
Publication Type journal article
Creator Gerig, Guido
Other Author Bullitt, Elizabeth; Zeng, Donglin; Aylward, Stephen; Joshi, Sarang; Smith, J. Keith; Lin, Weili; Ewend, Matthew G.
Title Vessel tortuosity and brain tumor malignancy: a blinded study
Date 2005-01-01
Description Rationale-Malignancy provokes regional changes to vessel shape. Characteristic vessel tortuosity abnormalities appear early during tumor development, affect initially healthy vessels, spread beyond the confines of tumor margins, and do not simply mirror tissue perfusion. The ability to detect and quantify tortuosity abnormalities on high-resolution MRA images offers a new approach to the noninvasive diagnosis of malignancy. This report evaluates a computerized, statistical method of analyzing the shapes of vessels extracted from MRA in diagnosing cancer. Materials and Methods-The regional vasculature of 34 healthy subjects was compared to the tumor-associated vasculature of 30 brain tumors prior to surgical resection. The operator performing the analysis was blinded to the diagnosis. Vessels were segmented from an MRA of each subject, a region of interest was defined in each tumor patient and was mapped to all healthy controls, and a statistical analysis of vessel shape measures was then performed over the region of interest. Many difficult cases were included, such as pinpoint, hemorrhagic, and irradiated tumors, as were hypervascular benign tumors. Tumors were identified as benign or malignant on the basis of histological evaluation. Results-A discriminant analysis performed at the study's conclusion successfully classified all but one of the 30 tumors as benign or malignant on the basis of vessel tortuosity. Discussion-Quantitative, statistical measures of vessel shape offer a new approach to the diagnosis and staging of disease. Although the methods developed under the current report must be tested against a new series of cases, initial results are promising.
Type InteractiveResource
Publisher Elsevier
Journal Title Academic Radiology
Volume 12
Issue 10
First Page 1232
Last Page 1240
DOI 10.1016/j.acra.2005.05.027
Subject Computer; Cancer; Blood vessels; Tortuosity; MRA; Brain tumor
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Bullitt, E., Zeng, D., Gerig, G., Aylward, S., Joshi, S., Smith, J. K., Lin, W., & Ewend, M. G.(2005). Vessel tortuosity and brain tumor malignancy: a blinded study. Academic Radiology, 12(10), 1232-40.
Rights Management (c) Elsevier ; Authors manuscript from Bullitt, E., Zeng, D., Gerig, G., Aylward, S., Joshi, S., Smith, J. K., Lin, W., & Ewend, M. (2005). Vessel tortuosity and brain tumor malignancy: a blinded study. Academic Radiology, 12(10), 1232-40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2005.05.027.
Format Medium application/html
Identifier uspace, 19291
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Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6k96hnw
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