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Fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition (FIESTA) MRI to investigate cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) within dural reflections of posterior fossa cranial nerves

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Noble, DJ 
Scoffings, D 
Ajithkumar, T 
Williams, MV 
Jefferies, SJ 

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: There is no consensus approach to covering skull base meningeal reflections-and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) therein-of the posterior fossa cranial nerves (CNs VII-XII) when planning radiotherapy (RT) for medulloblastoma and ependymoma. We sought to determine whether MRI and specifically fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition (FIESTA) sequences can answer this anatomical question and guide RT planning.

METHODS: 96 posterior fossa FIESTA sequences were reviewed. Following exclusions, measurements were made on the following scans for each foramen respectively (left, right); internal acoustic meatus (IAM) (86, 84), jugular foramen (JF) (83, 85) and hypoglossal canal (HC) (42, 45). A protocol describes measurement procedure. Two observers measured distances for five cases and agreement was assessed. One observer measured all the remaining cases.

RESULTS: IAM and JF measurement interobserver variability was compared. Mean measurement difference between observers was -0.275 mm (standard deviation 0.557). IAM and JF measurements were normally distributed. Mean IAM distance was 12.2 mm [95% confidence interval (CI) 8.8-15.6]; JF was 7.3 mm (95% CI 4.0-10.6). The HC was difficult to visualize on many images and data followed a bimodal distribution.

CONCLUSION: Dural reflections of posterior fossa CNs are well demonstrated by FIESTA MRI. Measuring CSF extension into these structures is feasible and robust; mean CSF extension into IAM and JF was measured. We plan further work to assess coverage of these structures with photon and proton RT plans.

Advances in knowledge: We have described CSF extension beyond the internal table of the skull into the IAM, JF and HC. Oncologists planning RT for patients with medulloblastoma and ependymoma may use these data to guide contouring.

Description

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cerebellar Neoplasms, Cerebrospinal Fluid, Child, Child, Preschool, Cranial Nerves, Ependymoma, Female, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Infant, Infratentorial Neoplasms, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Medulloblastoma, Middle Aged, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies

Journal Title

Br J Radiol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0007-1285
1748-880X

Volume Title

89

Publisher

British Institute of Radiology
Sponsorship
Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust (ACT) (24/15 A/Noble)
DJN is currently funded by Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust with future funding from Cancer Research UK via the Cambridge Cancer Centre.