Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3981434 Clinical Radiology 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Updated ISSVA 2014 system has been used for classification of pediatric soft tissue vascular anomalies in the head and neck.•The accuracy of TWIST vs. Contrast Enhanced-MRI for diagnosis of vascular anomalies is presented.•Dynamic contrast enhanced MRA provides valuable hemodynamic information, assisting diagnosis and classification.•Utility of blood pool contrast agent, Gadofosveset Trisodium (Ablavar), has been demonstrated both in the TWIST and contrast enhanced MRI.•Ablavar provides higher contrast and signal to noise ratio with 1/3 of the dose of other gadolinium based contrast agents.

AimTo evaluate the relative accuracy of contrast-enhanced time-resolved angiography with interleaved stochastic trajectories versus conventional contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) following International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies updated 2014-based classification of soft-tissue vascular anomalies in the head and neck in children.Materials and methodsTime-resolved angiography with interleaved stochastic trajectories versus conventional contrast-enhanced MRI of children with diagnosis of soft-tissue vascular anomalies in the head and neck referred for MRI between 2008 and 2014 were retrospectively reviewed. Forty-seven children (0–18 years) were evaluated. Two paediatric neuroradiologists evaluated time-resolved MRA and conventional MRI in two different sessions (30 days apart). Blood-pool endovascular MRI contrast agent gadofosveset trisodium was used.ResultsThe present cohort had the following diagnoses: infantile haemangioma (n=6), venous malformation (VM; n=23), lymphatic malformation (LM; n=16), arteriovenous malformation (AVM; n=2). Time-resolved MRA alone accurately classified 38/47 (81%) and conventional MRI 42/47 (89%), respectively. Although time-resolved MRA alone is slightly superior to conventional MRI alone for diagnosis of infantile haemangioma, conventional MRI is slightly better for diagnosis of venous and LMs. Neither time-resolved MRA nor conventional MRI was sufficient for accurate diagnosis of AVM in this cohort. Conventional MRI combined with time-resolved MRA accurately classified 44/47 cases (94%).ConclusionTime-resolved MRA using gadofosveset trisodium can accurately classify soft-tissue vascular anomalies in the head and neck in children. The addition of time-resolved MRA to existing conventional MRI protocols provides haemodynamic information, assisting the diagnosis of vascular anomalies in the paediatric population at one-third of the dose of other MRI contrast agents.

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