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Imaging of prostate cancer: a platform for 3D co-registration of in-vivo MRI ex-vivo MRI and pathology

Orczyk, Clement; Mikheev, Artem; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Melamed, Jonathan; Taneja, Samir S; Rusinek, Henry
OBJECTIVES: Multi-parametric MRI is emerging as a promising method for prostate cancer diagnosis. prognosis and treatment planning. However, the localization of in-vivo detected lesions and pathologic sites of cancer remains a significant challenge. To overcome this limitation we have developed and tested a system for co-registration of in-vivo MRI, ex-vivo MRI and histology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer (ages 54-72, PSA levels 5.1-7.7 ng/ml) were prospectively enrolled in this study. All patients underwent 3T multi-parametric MRI that included T2W, DCE-MRI, and DWI prior to robotic-assisted prostatectomy. Ex-vivo multi-parametric MRI was performed on fresh prostate specimen. Excised prostates were then sliced at regular intervals and photographed both before and after fixation. Slices were perpendicular to the main axis of the posterior capsule, i.e., along the direction of the rectal wall. Guided by the location of the urethra, 2D digital images were assembled into 3D models. Cancer foci, extra-capsular extensions and zonal margins were delineated by the pathologist and included in 3D histology data. A locally-developed software was applied to register in-vivo, ex-vivo and histology using an over-determined set of anatomical landmarks placed in anterior fibro-muscular stroma, central. transition and peripheral zones. The mean root square distance across corresponding control points was used to assess co-registration error. RESULTS: Two specimens were pT3a and one pT2b (negative margin) at pathology. The software successfully fused in-vivo MRI. ex-vivo MRI fresh specimen and histology using appropriate (rigid and affine) transformation models with mean square error of 1.59 mm. Coregistration accuracy was confirmed by multi-modality viewing using operator-guided variable transparency. CONCLUSION: The method enables successful co-registration of pre-operative MRI, ex-vivo MRI and pathology and it provides initial evidence of feasibility of MRI-guided surgical planning.
PMCID:3928603
PMID: 24563727
ISSN: 1996-756x
CID: 918082

Hepatoportal sclerosis: CT and MRI appearance with histopathologic correlation

Krishnan, Pranay; Fiel, M Isabel; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Hajdu, Cristina H; Schiano, Thomas D; Oyfe, Irina; Taouli, Bachir
OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to describe the spectrum of cross-sectional imaging findings of pathologically proven hepatoportal sclerosis and to compare the features of advanced and nonadvanced hepatoportal sclerosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen patients with a histopathologic diagnosis of hepatoportal sclerosis who had concurrent MRI or CT images participated in the study. The following imaging features were assessed: presence of liver nodularity and liver lesions, portal vein patency, presence and degree of portal hypertension, liver volume, and caudate-to-right lobe ratio. These features were compared between patients who underwent transplant and those who did not. RESULTS: The 18 patients (11 men and one boy, six women; mean age, 46.5 years) had hepatoportal sclerosis confirmed with liver biopsy (14 patients) or explant (four patients). Fourteen patients underwent contrast-enhanced MRI, and five underwent CT. The imaging findings were as follows: liver surface nodularity, five patients (all four transplant, one nontransplant) (p = 0.0016); evidence of portal hypertension, 17 patients; increased caudate-to-right lobe ratio, 16 patients; high periportal signal intensity on T2-weighted images, six patients; portal vein occlusion with cavernous transformation, five patients. The transplant patients had smaller pretransplant liver volume than did nontransplant patients (p < 0.04). CONCLUSION: Hepatoportal sclerosis is characterized by caudate lobe hypertrophy and right hepatic lobe atrophy, preserved liver volume, and lack of the liver nodularity associated with portal hypertension. In advanced cases, liver nodularity and atrophy produce an imaging appearance indistinguishable from that of cirrhosis.
PMID: 22268180
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 160260

Multilocular cystic renal cell carcinoma: comparison of imaging and pathologic findings

Hindman, Nicole M; Bosniak, Morton A; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Lee-Felker, Stephanie; Melamed, Jonathan
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to retrospectively correlate the imaging and pathologic features of multilocular cystic renal cell carcinoma (RCC), a low-grade neoplasm that has an excellent prognosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Institutional databases were searched for the period between 2001 and 2010 to identify cases of resected renal tumors that had been evaluated with CT or MRI and been analyzed by a uropathologist to confirm the histologic diagnosis of multilocular cystic RCC. The images (nine CT, 14 MRI) were reviewed, and a Bosniak cyst category was assigned. RESULTS: Of 23 confirmed cases of multilocular cystic RCC, imaging revealed seven lesions were Bosniak category IIF, 13 were category III, and three were category IV. Pathologic examination of the category IIF lesions revealed 99% fluid, 0.001-1% clear cells lining the septum, and 0% fibrosis. The category III lesions were 98-99% fluid, 1-2% clear cells, and 0% fibrosis. The category IV lesions were 20-40% fluid, 1-5% clear cells, and 60-80% fibrosis. The patient demographics were similar across groups. Clinical follow-up showed no evidence of recurrent or metastatic disease. CONCLUSION: Multilocular cystic RCC is a rare cystic lesion of the kidney that is low risk to the patient and benign in behavior. It has a variable imaging pattern, the Bosniak category ranging from IIF to IV. As multilocular cystic RCC lesions increase in complexity on images (higher Bosniak category), there is a corresponding increase in the volume of malignant cells lining the tumor and an increase in the presence of vascularized fibrous tissue. Regardless of the imaging appearance, the behavior of these tumors was benign in this study. Clinicians and radiologists should be aware that when this carcinoma is reported to occur, the patient has an excellent prognosis.
PMID: 22194510
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 157614

Magnetization Transfer Contrast-prepared MR Imaging of the Liver: Inability to Distinguish Healthy from Cirrhotic Liver

Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Storey, Pippa; Gilet, Anthony G; Niver, Benjamin E; Babb, James S; Hajdu, Cristina H; Lee, Vivian S
Purpose: To evaluate the ability of magnetization transfer (MT) contrast-prepared magnetic resonance (MR) imaging to help distinguish healthy from cirrhotic liver by using a spectrum of MT pulse frequency offsets. Materials and Methods: This HIPAA-compliant prospective study was approved by the institutional review board. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. After optimization of the MT sequence by using agar phantoms with protein concentrations ranging from 0% to 4%, 20 patients with cirrhosis and portal hypertension and 20 healthy volunteers with no known liver disease underwent liver MR imaging that included eight separate breath-hold MT contrast sequences, each performed by using a different MT pulse frequency offset (range, 200-2500 Hz). Regions of interest were then placed to calculate the MT ratio for the liver, fat, and muscle in the volunteer group and for the liver in the cirrhosis group. Results: MT ratio increased with decreasing MT pulse frequency offset for each of the four phantoms and the assessed in vivo tissues, consistent with previous reports. At all frequency offsets, MT ratio increased with increasing phantom protein concentration. In volunteers, at frequency offsets greater than 400 Hz, the MT ratio was significantly greater for muscle (range, 34.4%-54.9%) and significantly lower for subcutaneous fat (range, 10.3%-12.6%), compared with that for the liver (range, 22.8%-46.9%; P < .001 all comparisons). However, the MT ratio was nearly identical between healthy (range, 26.0%-80.0%) and cirrhotic livers (range, 26.7%-81.2%) for all frequency offsets (P = .162-.737), aside from a minimal difference in MT ratio of 1.7% at a frequency offset of 2500 Hz (22.8% in healthy liver vs 24.5% in cirrhotic liver) that was not significant when the Bonferroni correction was applied (P = .015). Conclusion: Findings of this study confirm the ability of the MT contrast-prepared sequence to help distinguish substances of varying protein concentration and suggest that MT imaging is unlikely to be of clinical utility in differentiating healthy and cirrhotic livers. (c) RSNA, 2011
PMID: 22114240
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 147688

Comparison of 3D two-point Dixon and standard 2D dual-echo breath-hold sequences for detection and quantification of fat content in renal angiomyolipoma

Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Raj, Sean; Babb, James S; Chandarana, Hersh
PURPOSE: To assess the utility of a 3D two-point Dixon sequence with water-fat decomposition for quantification of fat content of renal angiomyolipoma (AML). METHODS: 84 patients underwent renal MRI including 2D in-and-opposed-phase (IP and OP) sequence and 3D two-point Dixon sequence that generates four image sets [IP, OP, water-only (WO), and fat-only (FO)] within one breath-hold. Two radiologists reviewed 2D and 3D images during separate sessions to identify fat-containing renal masses measuring at least 1cm. For identified lesions subsequently confirmed to represent AML, ROIs were placed at matching locations on 2D and 3D images and used to calculate 2D and 3D SI(index) [(SI(IP)-SI(OP))/SI(IP)] and 3D fat fraction (FF) [SI(FO)/(SI(FO)+SI(WO))]. 2D and 3D SI(index) were compared with 3D FF using Pearson correlation coefficients. RESULTS: 41 AMLs were identified in 6 patients. While all were identified using the 3D sequence, 39 were identified using the 2D sequence, with the remaining 2 AMLs retrospectively visible on 2D images but measuring under 1cm. Among 32 AMLs with a 3D FF of over 50%, both 2D and 3D SI(index) showed a statistically significant inverse correlation with 3D FF (2D SI(index): r=-0.63, p=0.0010; 3D SI(index): r=-0.97, p<0.0001). CONCLUSION: 3D two-point Dixon sequence may provide a reasonable alternative to 2D dual-echo sequence for detection of renal AML and may have additional value for quantification of fat content of these lesions given the observation that 3D FF, unlike 2D and 3D SI(index), is not limited by ambiguity of water or fat dominance. This may assist clinical management of AML given evidence that fat content predicts embolization response
PMID: 21126839
ISSN: 1872-7727
CID: 149790

Unilateral Adenocarcinoma and High-Grade Prostatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia in Prostatectomies: Possible Implication for Patient Care [Meeting Abstract]

Kong, Max X.; Ren, Qinghu; Deng, Fang-Ming; Rosenkrantz, Andrew; Taneja, Samir; Melamed, Jonathan; Mendrinos, Savvas
ISI:000209848700106
ISSN: 0002-9173
CID: 4448282

DOES SUSPICION OF PROSTATE CANCER BY MULTIPARAMETRIC MRI PREDICT GREATER LIKELIHOOD OF MORE ADVERSE PATHOLOGY ON RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY? [Meeting Abstract]

Borofsky, Michael S; Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Abraham, Nitya E; Jain, Rajat; Taneja, Samir S
ISI:000302912500361
ISSN: 0022-5347
CID: 1871752

Osteoclast-like Giant Cell Tumor of the Renal Pelvis Associated With Urothelial Carcinoma: Computed Tomography, Gross, and Histologic Appearance

Rosenkrantz AB; Melamed J; Stifelman M
Osteoclastoma-like giant cell tumor of the renal pelvis, similar to the entity more commonly occurring in bone, is very rare, having been reported in twelve previous cases to our knowledge. This is the first report of this entity, to our knowledge, to include its cross-sectional imaging appearance. A hyperdense area within the lesion on non-contrast CT may correspond with extensive hemorrhagic content of the lesion identified histologically. As in most prior cases, an adjacent smaller urothelial carcinoma of the renal pelvis was also identified. In the limited reported cases, this entity has exhibited highly aggressive behavior with poor prognosis
PMID: 21458035
ISSN: 1527-9995
CID: 134891

MRI findings of sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma in nine cases

Rosenkrantz, Andrew B; Chandarana, Hersh; Melamed, Jonathan
PURPOSE: To assess the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features of a series of 9 cases of pathologically proven sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma (SRCC). METHODS: Two radiologists in consensus retrospectively reviewed a spectrum of MRI features of nine cases of SRCC imaged at our institution between 2003 and 2009. RESULTS: SRCC had a mean diameter of 9.9 cm. All cases had an irregular or infiltrative morphology and demonstrated heterogeneous T2 signal intensity and enhancement. Internal necrosis was present in all cases, with four cases demonstrating >50% necrosis. Evidence of aggressive local behavior and/or distant spread was frequently observed. CONCLUSIONS: We have presented the largest case series to our knowledge of the MRI appearance of SRCC, with the lesions tending to appear as large heterogeneous masses with internal necrosis and evidence of aggressive local or distant behavior. However, these imaging features are non-specific, and histology remains necessary to establish the diagnosis
PMID: 22040791
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 140534

Free-Breathing Radial 3D Fat-Suppressed T1-Weighted Gradient Echo Sequence: A Viable Alternative for Contrast-Enhanced Liver Imaging in Patients Unable to Suspend Respiration

Chandarana H; Block TK; Rosenkrantz AB; Lim RP; Kim D; Mossa DJ; Babb JS; Kiefer B; Lee VS
OBJECTIVE:: To compare free-breathing radially sampled 3D fat suppressed T1-weighted gradient-echo acquisitions (radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination [VIBE]) with breath-hold (BH) and free-breathing conventional (rectilinearly sampled k-space) VIBE acquisitions for postcontrast imaging of the liver. MATERIALS AND METHODS:: Eighteen consecutive patients referred for clinically indicated liver magnetic resonance imaging were imaged at 3 T. Three minutes after a single dose of gadolinium contrast injection, free-breathing radial VIBE, BH VIBE, and free-breathing VIBE with 4 averages were acquired in random order with matching sequence parameters. Radial VIBE was acquired with the 'stack-of-stars' scheme, which uses conventional sampling in the slice direction and radial sampling in-plane.All image data sets were evaluated independently by 3 radiologists blinded to patient and sequence information. Each reader scored the following parameters: overall image quality, respiratory motion artifact, pulsation artifact, liver edge sharpness, and hepatic vessel clarity using a 5-point scale, with the highest score indicating the most optimum examination. Mixed model analysis of variance was used to compare sequences in terms of each measure of image quality. RESULTS:: When scores were averaged over readers, there was no statistically significant difference between radial VIBE and BH VIBE regarding overall image quality (P = 0.1015), respiratory motion artifact (P = 1.0), and liver edge sharpness (P = 0.2955). Radial VIBE demonstrated significantly lower pulsation artifact (P < 0.0001), but had lower hepatic vessel clarity (P = 0.0176), when compared with BH VIBE. Radial VIBE had significantly higher image quality scores for all parameters when compared with free-breathing VIBE (P < 0.0001). Acquisition time for BH VIBE was 14 seconds and that of free-breathing radial VIBE and conventional VIBE with multiple averages was 56 seconds each. CONCLUSION:: Radial VIBE can be performed during free breathing for contrast-enhanced imaging of the liver with comparable image quality to BH VIBE. However, further work is necessary to shorten the acquisition time to perform dynamic imaging
PMID: 21577119
ISSN: 1536-0210
CID: 135367