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Current whole-body MRI applications in the neurofibromatoses: NF1, NF2, and schwannomatosis
Ahlawat, Shivani; Fayad, Laura M; Khan, Muhammad Shayan; Bredella, Miriam A; Harris, Gordon J; Evans, D Gareth; Farschtschi, Said; Jacobs, Michael A; Chhabra, Avneesh; Salamon, Johannes M; Wenzel, Ralph; Mautner, Victor F; Dombi, Eva; Cai, Wenli; Plotkin, Scott R; Blakeley, Jaishri O; [Yohay, Kaleb]
OBJECTIVES: The Response Evaluation in Neurofibromatosis and Schwannomatosis (REiNS) International Collaboration Whole-Body MRI (WB-MRI) Working Group reviewed the existing literature on WB-MRI, an emerging technology for assessing disease in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2), and schwannomatosis (SWN), to recommend optimal image acquisition and analysis methods to enable WB-MRI as an endpoint in NF clinical trials. METHODS: A systematic process was used to review all published data about WB-MRI in NF syndromes to assess diagnostic accuracy, feasibility and reproducibility, and data about specific techniques for assessment of tumor burden, characterization of neoplasms, and response to therapy. RESULTS: WB-MRI at 1.5T or 3.0T is feasible for image acquisition. Short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence is used in all investigations to date, suggesting consensus about the utility of this sequence for detection of WB tumor burden in people with NF. There are insufficient data to support a consensus statement about the optimal imaging planes (axial vs coronal) or 2D vs 3D approaches. Functional imaging, although used in some NF studies, has not been systematically applied or evaluated. There are no comparative studies between regional vs WB-MRI or evaluations of WB-MRI reproducibility. CONCLUSIONS: WB-MRI is feasible for identifying tumors using both 1.5T and 3.0T systems. The STIR sequence is a core sequence. Additional investigation is needed to define the optimal approach for volumetric analysis, the reproducibility of WB-MRI in NF, and the diagnostic performance of WB-MRI vs regional MRI.
PMCID:5578359
PMID: 27527647
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 2473142
Brain Region-Specific Degeneration with Disease Progression in Late Infantile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (CLN2 Disease)
Dyke, J P; Sondhi, D; Voss, H U; Yohay, K; Hollmann, C; Mancenido, D; Kaminsky, S M; Heier, L A; Rudser, K D; Kosofsky, B; Casey, B J; Crystal, R G; Ballon, D
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (CLN2 disease) is a uniformly fatal lysosomal storage disease resulting from mutations in the CLN2 gene. Our hypothesis was that regional analysis of cortical brain degeneration may identify brain regions that are affected earliest and most severely by the disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty-two high-resolution 3T MR imaging datasets were prospectively acquired on 38 subjects with CLN2. A retrospective cohort of 52 disease-free children served as a control population. The FreeSurfer software suite was used for calculation of cortical thickness. RESULTS: An increased rate of global cortical thinning in CLN2 versus control subjects was the primary finding in this study. Three distinct patterns were observed across brain regions. In the first, subjects with CLN2 exhibited differing rates of cortical thinning versus age. This was true in 22 and 26 of 34 regions in the left and right hemispheres, respectively, and was also clearly discernable when considering brain lobes as a whole and Brodmann regions. The second pattern exhibited a difference in thickness from healthy controls but with no discernable change with age (9 left hemispheres, 5 right hemispheres). In the third pattern, there was no difference in either the rate of cortical thinning or the mean cortical thickness between groups (3 left hemispheres, 3 right hemispheres). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that CLN2 causes differential rates of degeneration across the brain. Anatomic and functional regions that degenerate sooner and more severely than others compared with those in healthy controls may offer targets for directed therapies. The information gained may also provide neurobiologic insights regarding the mechanisms underlying disease progression.
PMCID:4907890
PMID: 26822727
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 2009792
Neuro-behcet disease in an african american adolescent
Merkler, Alexander E; Maciel, Carolina B; May, Alison S; Vargas, Wendy S; Yohay, Kaleb
PMCID:4272349
PMID: 25553229
ISSN: 1941-8744
CID: 2473062
Efficacy of local polymer-based and systemic delivery of the anti-glutamatergic agents riluzole and memantine in rat glioma models
Yohay, Kaleb; Tyler, Betty; Weaver, Kyle D; Pardo, Andrea C; Gincel, Dan; Blakeley, Jaishri; Brem, Henry; Rothstein, Jeffrey D
OBJECT: The poor outcome of malignant gliomas is largely due to local invasiveness. Previous studies suggest that gliomas secrete excess glutamate and destroy surrounding normal peritumoral brain by means of excitotoxic mechanisms. In this study the authors assessed the effect on survival of 2 glutamate modulators (riluzole and memantine) in rodent glioma models. METHODS: In an in vitro growth inhibition assay, F98 and 9L cells were exposed to riluzole and memantine. Mouse cerebellar organotypic cultures were implanted with F98 glioma cells and treated with radiation, radiation + riluzole, or vehicle and assessed for tumor growth. Safety and tolerability of intracranially implanted riluzole and memantine CPP:SA polymers were tested in F344 rats. The efficacy of these drugs was tested against the 9L model and riluzole was further tested with and without radiation therapy (RT). RESULTS: In vitro assays showed effective growth inhibition of both drugs on F98 and 9L cell lines. F98 organotypic cultures showed reduced growth of tumors treated with radiation and riluzole in comparison with untreated cultures or cultures treated with radiation or riluzole alone. Three separate efficacy experiments all showed that localized delivery of riluzole or memantine is efficacious against the 9L gliosarcoma tumor in vivo. Systemic riluzole monotherapy was ineffective; however, riluzole given with RT resulted in improved survival. CONCLUSIONS: Riluzole and memantine can be safely and effectively delivered intracranially via polymer in rat glioma models. Both drugs demonstrate efficacy against the 9L gliosarcoma and F98 glioma in vitro and in vivo. Although systemic riluzole proved ineffective in increasing survival, riluzole acted synergistically with radiation and increased survival compared with RT or riluzole alone.
PMCID:4322948
PMID: 24484234
ISSN: 0022-3085
CID: 1273012
Differential degeneration of cortical thickness with disease progression in late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis [Meeting Abstract]
Dyke, Jonathan P; Sondhi, Dolan; Voss, Henning; Shungu, Dikoma; Mao, Xiangling; Yohay, Kaleb; Worgall, Stefan; Hollmann, Charleen; Van de Graaf, Benjamin; Kaminsky, Stephen; Heier, Linda; Rudser, Kyle; Connett, John; Souweidane, Mark; Kaplitt, Michael; Kosofsky, Barry; Crystal, Ronald; Ballon, Douglas
ISI:000330746000067
ISSN: 1096-7206
CID: 2442682
Incidental parenchymal magnetic resonance imaging findings in the brains of patients with neurofibromatosis type 2
Vargas, Wendy S; Heier, Linda A; Rodriguez, Fausto; Bergner, Amanda; Yohay, Kaleb
PURPOSE: Whereas T2 hyperintensities known as NF-associated bright spots are well described in patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF-1), there is a paucity of data on incidental findings in patients with neurofibromatosis type II (NF-2). We aim to characterize unexplained imaging findings in the brains of patients with NF-2. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study is retrospective, HIPAA-compliant and approved by the institutional review board. 34 patients with NF-2 underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) between January 2000 and December 2012. T2 and T1-weighted imaging characteristics, diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) characteristics, and enhancement patterns were analyzed by visual inspection. Clinical information at time of imaging was available for all patients. Neuropathologic data was available for one patient. RESULTS: We found unexplained T2 hyperintensities present on initial imaging in 23/34 patients (67%). Of the 23 patients with unexplained MRI findings, 15 (65%) had wedge-shaped T2 hyperintensities in the subcortical white matter extending to the cortex suggestive of a cortical dysplasia. 3 additional cases (17%) had a lesion within the cerebellum suggestive of a neuronal migration anomaly. In one patient where the MRI was suggestive of focal cortical dysplasia, histopathologic analysis revealed dysplastic glial foci without other alterations of cortical architecture or other cytologic abnormalities. CONCLUSION: Unexplained T2 hyperintensities occur frequently in patients with NF-2. While they may not be the NF-2 equivalent of NF-associated bright spots seen in NF-1, some of these T2 hyperintensities in patients with NF-2 may represent underlying disorders of neuronal migration. Further studies are needed to validate our findings.
PMCID:3913834
PMID: 24501699
ISSN: 2213-1582
CID: 967812
Assessment of disease severity in late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis using multiparametric MR imaging
Dyke, J P; Sondhi, D; Voss, H U; Shungu, D C; Mao, X; Yohay, K; Worgall, S; Hackett, N R; Hollmann, C; Yeotsas, M E; Jeong, A L; Van de Graaf, B; Cao, I; Kaminsky, S M; Heier, L A; Rudser, K D; Souweidane, M M; Kaplitt, M G; Kosofsky, B; Crystal, R G; Ballon, D
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: LINCL is a uniformly fatal lysosomal storage disease resulting from mutations in the CLN2 gene that encodes for tripeptidyl peptidase 1, a lysosomal enzyme necessary for the degradation of products of cellular metabolism. With the goal of developing quantitative noninvasive imaging biomarkers sensitive to disease progression, we evaluated a 5-component MR imaging metric and tested its correlation with a clinically derived disease-severity score. MATERIALS AND METHODS: MR imaging parameters were measured across the brain, including quantitative measures of the ADC, FA, nuclear spin-spin relaxation times (T2), volume percentage of CSF (%CSF), and NAA/Cr ratios. Thirty MR imaging datasets were prospectively acquired from 23 subjects with LINCL (2.5-8.4 years of age; 8 male/15 female). Whole-brain histograms were created, and the mode and mean values of the histograms were used to characterize disease severity. RESULTS: Correlation of single MR imaging parameters against the clinical disease-severity scale yielded linear regressions with R2 ranging from 0.25 to 0.70. Combinations of the 5 biomarkers were evaluated by using PCA. The best combination included ADC, %CSF, and NAA/Cr (R2=0.76, P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: The multiparametric disease-severity score obtained from the combination of ADC, %CSF, and NAA/Cr whole-brain MR imaging techniques provided a robust measure of disease severity, which may be useful in clinical therapeutic trials of LINCL in which an objective assessment of therapeutic response is desired.
PMCID:3644851
PMID: 23042927
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 416942
Ophthalmic artery ischemic syndrome associated with neurofibromatosis and moyamoya syndrome [Letter]
Witmer, Matthew T; Levy, Richard; Yohay, Kaleb; Kiss, Szilard
PMID: 23430230
ISSN: 2168-6165
CID: 1273022
Vascular distribution of glioblastoma multiforme at diagnosis
Yohay, K; Wolf, D S; Aronson, L J; Duus, M; Melhem, E R; Cohen, K J
Treatment of high-grade gliomas with selective intra-arterial (IA) administration of chemotherapies has been proposed, and utilized as a therapeutic modality. This approach offers the conceptual benefit of providing maximal delivery of the agent to the tumor bed, while potentially reducing systemic exposure to the agent. This retrospective study was designed to determine the vascular distribution of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) at the time of diagnosis in an effort to determine what proportion of patients would likely be candidates for this approach. The preoperative MRI scans of 50 patients with GBM were analyzed and compared to published normative data of intracranial vascular distribution. Vascular distribution was determined by analyzing post-gadolinium axial and coronal T1 images, axial T2 images, and axial T2 images with an additional 1 cm margin (T2 + 1 cm) added in all dimensions. T1 analysis demonstrated 60% of tumors in a single vascular distribution. T2 analysis of these tumors reduced that number to 34%. When the T2 + 1 cm margin was utilized, only 6% of tumors were in a single vascular distribution. 66% of tumors were limited to the anterior circulation on T1 imaging but only 34% on T2 + 1 cm imaging. 30% of tumors were also within the distribution of the anterior choroidal artery. These findings suggest that the use of selective IA administration of agents is necessarily limited to a fraction of presenting patients or will require administration via multiple cerebral arteries.
PMCID:3601610
PMID: 23472735
ISSN: 1591-0199
CID: 1273122
Comparison of hematologic measurements between local and central laboratories: data from the BABY HUG trial
Kalpatthi, Ram; Thompson, Bruce; Lu, Ming; Wang, Winfred C; Patel, Niren; Kutlar, Abdullah; Howard, Thomas; Luchtman-Jones, Lori; Miller, Scott T; [Yohay, Kaleb]
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the concordance of blood count indices measured locally and at a central laboratory. DESIGN AND METHODS: In a multi-center clinical trial of hydroxyurea therapy in infants with sickle cell anemia (BABY HUG), the concordance between blood count indices measured locally and at a central laboratory was investigated. RESULTS: Local laboratory measurements of neutrophil and monocyte counts were significantly higher (44% and 37%, respectively) compared to the central measurements (p<0.0001), and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) was higher centrally. CONCLUSION: Overnight shipping with processing delay causes spurious reductions in absolute neutrophil count (ANC) and absolute monocyte count (AMC) that may result in incorrect monitoring decisions in multicenter clinical trials.
PMCID:4550480
PMID: 23123915
ISSN: 1873-2933
CID: 2473172