On regular (diagnostic) MRI images brain tumors can show "contrast enhancement": uptake of an intravenously administered contrast agent can cause an enhancement pattern that is seen as a white area on a frequently used MRI protocol ("T1 weighted imaging"). High grade gliomas are a common brain tumor that share this enhancement pattern. The goal of surgery is to resect this contrast enhancing part without causing additional neurological damage. Intraoperative MRI (iMRI) is a helpful tool in achieving this goal, because it can provide updated images during resection and correct for deformations that occur in the brain during surgery. These deformations make preoperative images that are used for standard neuronavigation systems less reliable. However, due to manipulations during surgery, the contrast uptake during surgery may differ from contrast uptake in diagnostic MRI. This study aims to relate contrast enhancement on iMRI and tumor characteristics on tissue samples from the tumor. When the neurosurgeon considers the resection of the high grade glioma to be complete, an iMRI scan will be made, and tissue sampling will be performed on the borderzones of the tumor or tumor resection cavity respectively. This will provide insight in the relation between contrast enhancement on iMRI and the presence of tumor tissue. Such knowledge is important to improve effectiveness and safety of iMRI guided brain tumor resection.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
low field strength mobile intraoperative MRI system (0,15 Tesla) with local Faraday shielding (using the StarShield system)
Maastricht University Medical Center
Maastricht, Limburg, Netherlands
The relation between the shape and size of contrast enhancement on intraoperative MRI at the resection cavity border, and the presence of residual tumor tissue.
Time frame: after surgery, and after 1 year for additional immunochemistry
The relation between possible contrast enhancement and contrast enhancing tissue volume on the last intraoperative MRI scan and the early diagnostic MRI scan
Time frame: within 72 hours after surgery
Postoperative clinical condition (WHO Performance Scale)
Time frame: 1 week after surgery
Survival (Kaplan Meier)
Time frame: after 4 years
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