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Crossed cerebellar diaschisis in post-treatment glioma patients: A comparative study of arterial spin labelling and dynamic susceptibility contrast.

OBJECTIVES: To assess crossed cerebellar diaschisis (CCD) in post-treatment glioma patients, and to compare the performance of arterial spin labelling (ASL) and dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) in detecting CCD.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: This retrospective study included 130 patients who had both DSC and ASL. Among them, 16 had underwent fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18 F-FDG PET/CT). We investigated the relationship between CCD and the location and size of supratentorial lesions, and compared PET diagnostic performance with that of ASL and DSC. We assessed the inter-methods agreement for ASL and DSC, and performed quantitative analysis by calculating the asymmetry index (AI) between bilateral cerebellum and exploring how the AI values for ASL-CBF, DSC-rCBF, and DSC-rCBV maps correlated with each other.

RESULT: Supratentorial lesions affecting the corona radiata (P < 0.001), basal ganglia (P < 0.001), and insula (P = 0.046) were significantly associated with the occurrence of CCD. Lesion size was significantly larger (P = 0.005) in the CCD positive group. With PET as a reference, ASL-CBF and DSC-rCBF maps exhibited the best diagnostic performance compared with the other DSC-generated maps (diagnostic accuracy = 83.3% for both, area under curve (AUC) of ASL = 0.967, AUC of rCBF = 0.983), although differences were not statistically significant. The κ value for the inter-methods (ASL and DSC) agreement in detecting CCD was 0.893, while the degree of perfusion asymmetry was more significant in ASL- than DSC-generated maps. Bland-Altman plots showed that the AI for ASL-CBF was moderately correlated with those for DSC-rCBF and DSC-rCBV.

CONCLUSIONS: CCD can present in post-treatment glioma patients and is detectable on MR-perfusion images including ASL-CBF, DSC-rCBF, and DSC-rCBV maps.

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