Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3981707 Clinical Radiology 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimTo investigate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings that could be used to differentiate intramedullary spinal ependymoma from astrocytoma, and to determine predictors for this differentiation.Materials and methodsMRI images of 43 consecutive patients with pathologically proven intramedullary spinal ependymoma (n = 24) and astrocytoma (n = 19) were comparatively evaluated with regard to size, location, margin, signal intensity, contrast enhancement, presence of syringohydromyelia, tumoural cyst, non-tumoural cyst, and haemorrhage. MRI findings and demographic data were compared between the two tumour groups using univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses.ResultsIn patients with ependymoma, older age and a larger solid component were more often observed than in astrocytoma. Central location, presence of enhancement, diffuse enhancement, syringohydromyelia, haemorrhage, and cap sign were more frequently observed in ependymoma. However, multivariate analysis revealed that syringohydromyelia was the only variable able to independently differentiate ependymoma from astrocytoma, with an odds ratio of 62.9 (95% CI: 4.38–903.22; p = 0.002).ConclusionAmong the various findings, the presence of syringohydromyelia is the main factor distinguishing ependymoma from astrocytoma.

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