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Published in: Pediatric Radiology 3/2018

01-03-2018 | Original Article

Change in liver, spleen and bone marrow magnetic resonance imaging signal intensity over time in children with solid abdominal tumors

Authors: Michael Sirignano, Jonathan R. Dillman, Brian D. Weiss, Charles T. Quinn, Bin Zhang, Weizhe Su, Andrew T. Trout

Published in: Pediatric Radiology | Issue 3/2018

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Abstract

Background

Reticuloendothelial system MRI signal hypointensity is common in pediatric oncology patients with solid abdominal tumors.

Objective

To assess changes in liver, spleen and bone marrow T2-weighted MRI signal intensity over time and their relationship to blood transfusion history in children with solid abdominal tumors.

Materials and methods

In this retrospective study we measured liver, spleen and bone marrow signal intensity on axial T2-weighted MR images obtained December 2009 through February 2016 in children with hepatoblastoma, neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma and Wilms tumor. All signal intensity measurements were normalized to paraspinal muscle signal intensity. We used linear mixed models (including a day*day quadratic term) to determine whether organ signal intensity changed over time and whether change was associated with blood transfusion volume or tumor type.

Results

We included 133 children (mean age at diagnosis =2.9 years); 56 had neuroblastoma, 42 hepatoblastoma, 28 Wilms tumor and 7 ganglioneuroblastoma. Seventy-nine (59.4%) children received transfusions (median: 8 transfusions, range: 1–30; mean volume: 1,148.5 mL). Hepatic, splenic and bone marrow signal intensity ratios changed quadratically over time for the study population, initially decreasing and then increasing (P<0.0001). Children receiving less than the mean blood transfusion volume showed no significant change in tissue signal intensity, while those receiving more than the mean volume showed significant changes in signal intensity over time (P<0.0001). Compared to children with Wilms tumor, those with neuroblastoma exhibited significantly lower hepatic (P=0.03) signal intensity ratios.

Conclusion

Liver, spleen and bone marrow T2-weighted MRI signal intensity ratios change over time in some pediatric patients with solid abdominal tumors, likely from tissue iron deposition related to blood transfusions and perhaps because of tumor type.
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Metadata
Title
Change in liver, spleen and bone marrow magnetic resonance imaging signal intensity over time in children with solid abdominal tumors
Authors
Michael Sirignano
Jonathan R. Dillman
Brian D. Weiss
Charles T. Quinn
Bin Zhang
Weizhe Su
Andrew T. Trout
Publication date
01-03-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Pediatric Radiology / Issue 3/2018
Print ISSN: 0301-0449
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1998
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00247-017-4047-y

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