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Abstract #3838

Differentiating Brain Metastases Recurrence from Treatment-Induced Changes Using Velocity-Selective ASL: Initial Experience

Dan Zhu1,2, Feng Xu1,2, Dapeng Liu1,2, Lisa Katulis3, Doris Lin2, Lawrence Kleinberg3, and Qin Qin1,2
1F.M. Kirby Research Center, Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States, 3Department of Radiation Oncology and Molecular Radiation Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Tumors (Post-Treatment), Arterial spin labelling, Brain Metastasis

Motivation: Brain metastases (BM) have increased frequency of treatment-related changes difficult to distinguish from progressive disease. To date, there are no studies evaluating arterial spin labeling (ASL) for BM patients during post-therapy follow-up.

Goal(s): To evaluate the feasibility of velocity-selective ASL (VSASL) derived cerebral blood flow (CBF) mapping in differentiating metastases recurrence from treatment-induced changes.

Approach: VSASL was applied to 9 BM patients, and compared with pseudo-continuous ASL (PCASL), dynamic susceptibility contrast perfusion-weighted imaging (DSC-PWI), and pathologic confirmation for some patients.

Results: VSASL is clinically feasible and more comparable with DSC-PWI than PCASL in patients with treated BM at suspicion of tumor progression.

Impact: This study showed that velocity-selective arterial spin labeling has the potential to offer a non-invasive alternative to dynamic susceptibility contrast perfusion-weighted imaging in differentiating tumor recurrence from treatment-induced changes among patients with brain metastases.

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