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161 - Oligodendroglioma

from Section 6 - Primarily Intra-Axial Masses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Maria Vittoria Spampinato
Affiliation:
Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Charleston, SC
Zoran Rumboldt
Affiliation:
Medical University of South Carolina
Mauricio Castillo
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Benjamin Huang
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Andrea Rossi
Affiliation:
G. Gaslini Children's Research Hospital
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Summary

Specific Imaging Findings

Oligodendrogliomas are usually well-demarcated supratentorial lesions that arise from the gray matter, most commonly in the frontal lobes. The typical CT findings include the presence of clumped and nodular calcification within a hypodense to isodense mass involving the cortex. Cystic changes commonly occur, while intratumoral hemorrhages are rare. Oligodendrogliomas are usually T1 hypointense and T2 hyperintense cortical-based lesions with mild mass effect, and areas of signal loss/susceptibility artifact on T2* sequences, caused by calcifications, may be found. Development of new areas of contrast enhancement and edema have been traditionally considered signs of anaplastic transformation in gliomas; however, contrast enhancement has shown very poor accuracy in differentiating anaplastic from lowgrade oligodendroglial tumors. Also, increased relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) on contrast-enhanced T2* MR perfusion studies, a marker for rapid progression and poor outcome in patients with gliomas, may be found in some low-grade oligodendrogliomas. Increase in tumor size within 6 months appears to be the best prognosticator of rapid tumor progression and poor outcome, better than the high initial tumor volume or high rCBV. Signal heterogeneity, irregular borders, and high rCBV of the tumors are suggestive of the 1p/19q deletion, which is associated with a better treatment response.

Type
Chapter
Information
Brain Imaging with MRI and CT
An Image Pattern Approach
, pp. 333 - 334
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

1. Koeller, KK, Rushing, EJ. From the archives of the AFIP: Oligodendroglioma and its variants: radiologic-pathologic correlation. Radiographics 2005;25:1669–88.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2. Cha, S, Tihan, T, Crawford, F, et al.Differentiation of low-grade oligodendrogliomas from low-grade astrocytomas by using quantitative blood-volume measurements derived from dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced MR imaging. AJNR 2005;26:266–73.Google ScholarPubMed
3. Lev, MH, Ozsunar, Y, Henson, JW, et al.Glial tumor grading and outcome prediction using dynamic spin-echo MR susceptibility mapping compared with conventional contrast-enhanced MR: confounding effect ofelevated rCBV of oligodendrogliomas [corrected]. AJNR 2004;25:214–21.Google Scholar
4. Jenkinson, MD, Smith, TS, Joyce, KA, et al.Cerebral blood volume, genotype and chemosensitivity in oligodendroglial tumours. Neuroradiology 2006;48:703–13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5. Brasil Caseiras, G, Ciccarelli, O, Altmann, DR, et al.Low-grade gliomas: six-month tumor growth predicts patient outcome better than admission tumor volume, relative cerebral blood volume, and apparent diffusion coefficient. Radiology 2009;253:505–12.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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