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Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ; 280(4): 1661-1670, 2023 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36114332

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: The primary objective was to determine whether the analysis of textural heterogeneity of vestibular schwannomas on MRI at diagnosis was predictive of their radiological evolutivity. The secondary objective was to determine whether some clinical or radiological factors could also be predictive of growth. METHODS: We conducted a pilot, observational and retrospective study of patients with a vestibular schwannoma, initially monitored, between April 2001 and November 2019 within the Oto-Neurosurgical Institute of Champagne Ardenne, Texture analysis was performed on gadolinium injected T1 and CISS T2 MRI sequences and six parameters were extracted: mean greyscale intensity, standard deviation of the greyscale histogram distribution, entropy, mean positive pixels, skewness and kurtosis, which were analysed by the Lasso method, using statistically penalised Cox models. Extrameatal location, tumour necrosis, perceived hearing loss < 2 years with objectified tone audiometry asymmetry, tinnitus at diagnosis, were investigated by the Log-Rank test to obtain univariate survival analyses. RESULTS: 78 patients were included and divided into 2 groups: group A comprising 39 "stable patients", and B comprising the remaining 39 "progressive patients". Independent analysis of the texture factors did not predict the growth potential of vestibular schwannomas. Among the clinical or radiological signs of interest, hearing loss < 2 years was identified as a prognostic factor for tumour progression with a significant trend (p = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: This study did not identify an association between texture analysis and vestibular schwannomas growth. Decreased hearing in the 2 years prior to diagnosis appears to predict potential radiological progression.


Asunto(s)
Neuroma Acústico , Acúfeno , Humanos , Neuroma Acústico/diagnóstico por imagen , Neuroma Acústico/complicaciones , Estudios Retrospectivos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Audición
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