Gaviani P, Mullins M E, Braga T A, Hedley-Whyte E T, Halpern E F, Schaefer P S, Henson J W
Stephen E. and Catherine Pappas Center for Neuro-Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass 02114, USA.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2006 Mar;27(3):605-8.
The imaging features of metastatic melanomas are distinctive due to the presence of melanin and the propensity for hemorrhage. Both hemorrhage and melanin can produce T1-weighted hyperintensity and T2*-weighted signal intensity loss. We hypothesized that T2*-weighted images would improve detection of metastatic melanoma.
The T2* and T1 characteristics of 120 newly detected metastatic brain lesions from 31 patients with malignant melanoma were compared with those of 120 brain metastases from 23 patients with lung cancer.
Melanoma metastases were 5 times more likely to demonstrate prominent T2*-related signal intensity loss (susceptibility effect) than were lung metastases (42% vs 8%; P < .01), and 4.5 times more likely to demonstrate T1 hyperintensity (55% vs 12%; P < .01). Patients with melanoma had lesions that were either hypointense on T2*-weighted images, hyperintense on T1 images, or both, in 71% (85/120), compared with 19% (23/120) of lung carcinoma metastases (P < .01). Melanoma lesions were 16 times more likely than lung cancer lesions to show combined T2* related signal intensity loss and T1 hyperintensity (P < .01). Remarkably, 8 melanoma lesions (7%) in 3 patients were detectable principally on the T2*-weighted sequences, whereas no lung cancer lesion was detected solely on susceptibility images. We found a direct correlation between melanin content and T1 hyperintensity but no correlation between T2* intensity and melanin.
T2*-weighted images improve lesion detection in patients with melanoma metastases, and in conjunction with T1-weighted sequences, can suggest melanoma as the etiology of an intracranial mass. This sequence should be employed for evaluation of possible brain metastasis in patients without a known primary malignancy and in studies for melanoma staging.
由于黑色素的存在以及出血倾向,转移性黑色素瘤的影像学特征较为独特。出血和黑色素均可导致T1加权像高信号以及T2加权像信号强度丢失。我们推测T2加权像可提高转移性黑色素瘤的检出率。
将31例恶性黑色素瘤患者新发现的120个脑转移瘤的T2和T1特征与23例肺癌患者的120个脑转移瘤的T2和T1特征进行比较。
黑色素瘤转移灶出现明显T2相关信号强度丢失(磁敏感效应)的可能性是肺转移灶的5倍(42% 对8%;P <.01),出现T1高信号的可能性是肺转移灶的4.5倍(55% 对12%;P <.01)。黑色素瘤患者的病灶在T2加权像上呈低信号、T1像上呈高信号或两者皆有者占71%(85/120),而肺癌转移灶中此类情况占19%(23/120)(P <.01)。黑色素瘤病灶出现T2相关信号强度丢失合并T1高信号的可能性是肺癌病灶的16倍(P <.01)。值得注意的是,3例患者中的8个黑色素瘤病灶(7%)主要在T2加权序列上可被检出,而没有一个肺癌病灶仅在磁敏感像上被检出。我们发现黑色素含量与T1高信号之间存在直接相关性,但T2*信号强度与黑色素之间无相关性。
T2*加权像可提高黑色素瘤转移患者病灶的检出率,结合T1加权序列,可提示黑色素瘤为颅内肿块的病因。该序列应用于评估无已知原发性恶性肿瘤患者可能的脑转移以及黑色素瘤分期研究。