Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Pathologic prognostic parameters for retinoblastoma have been defined. Our purpose was to correlate ADC values at 3T with prognostic parameters of retinoblastoma.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study included 72 children (30 boys and 42 girls, mean age 19 ± 2.6 months) with retinoblastoma. Pretreatment diffusion-weighted MR imaging was performed on a 3T scanner with b factors of 0, 500, and 1000 seconds/mm2. ADC values were calculated and pathologic specimens were analyzed. ADC values of the tumors were then correlated with prognostic parameters, including degree of histologic differentiation, tumor size, bilaterality, choroidal invasion, and optic nerve extension.
RESULTS: The mean ADC value of retinoblastoma was 0.49 ± 0.12 × 10−3 mm2/s. The ADC values of well- and moderately differentiated tumors were significantly different (P = .007) from poorly and undifferentiated retinoblastoma. There was also a significant difference in the ADC value among small, medium, and large tumors (P = .015), as well as between unilateral and bilateral retinoblastoma (P = .001), and this was independent of the degree of differentiation. The ADC value was also significantly lower (P = .003) when optic nerve invasion was present. There was no correlation of ADC value with growth pattern or choroidal invasion (P = .640 and 0.661, respectively). The ADC value of retinoblastoma was well correlated with the degree of differentiation of the tumor (r = 0.87, P = .007) and inversely correlated with the size of the tumor (r = −0.68, P = .015).
CONCLUSIONS: ADC correlated with some of the accepted parameters of poor prognosis for retinoblastoma and may serve as a noninvasive prognostic parameter for assessment of newly diagnosed retinoblastoma.
ABBREVIATIONS:
- CHESS
- chemical shift selective suppression
- HE
- hematoxylin-eosin
- PAS
- periodic-acid-Schiff
Retinoblastoma, a highly malignant tumor of the primitive neural retina, is the most common intraocular tumor of childhood. It occurs in 1 of 18,000–30,000 live births worldwide. The average age at diagnosis is 18 months, and 80% of cases occur during the first 3–4 years of life. The most common clinical sign of retinoblastoma is leukokoria (60%), followed by strabismus (20%).1⇓⇓⇓–5 Identified pathologic and clinical prognostic parameters of retinoblastoma include degree of histologic differentiation, tumor size, laterality, invasion of the choroid, and extension into the optic nerve.6⇓⇓–9 If the optic nerve is not invaded, then the mortality is less than 10%, whereas the mortality rate is 44% in postlaminar optic nerve invasion.10 Bilateral retinoblastomas are aggressive tumors that are commonly associated with metastatic disease and second malignancies.6,7 Imaging parameters with prognostic value have also been identified; for example, the degree of contrast enhancement of the anterior eye segment at MR imaging correlates with iris neovascularization, and this is associated with an increased risk of tumor recurrence and metastatic disease.11⇓–13
Diffusion-weighted MR imaging is a promising tool in the evaluation of head and neck malignancy14,15 and orbital disease. Diffusion-weighted MR imaging has been used in evaluation of orbital tumors of adults16,17 and children,18 ocular adnexal lymphomas,19 endophtalmitis,20 and optic nerve lesions.21,22 Several studies have correlated the apparent diffusion coefficient value with prognostic parameters for breast and lung cancer.23⇓–25 The aim of this work was to correlate the ADC value with prognostic parameters of retinoblastoma.
Materials and Methods
A retrospective study approved by our institutional review board was conducted upon consecutive patients with retinoblastoma who underwent diffusion-weighted MR imaging between January 2007 and November 2010. The inclusion criteria were 1) previously untreated patients with unilateral or bilateral retinoblastoma who underwent pre- and postcontrast and diffusion MR imaging of the orbit, and 2) subsequent enucleation of the affected eye in unilateral retinoblastoma and of 1 eye in bilateral retinoblastoma. Seventy-nine patients met these inclusion criteria, but 7 were subsequently excluded from the study: 3 patients had poor quality images due to susceptibility artifacts at MR imaging, and the quality of 4 pathologic specimens hampered proper analysis. Seventy-two patients, ranging in age from 1 month to 29 months (mean = 19 ± 2.6 months), were therefore included in this study. Patients with unilateral retinoblastoma (n = 49) underwent unilateral enucleation, and patients with bilateral retinoblastoma (n = 23) underwent unilateral enucleation for treatment of the more advanced lesion.
MR imaging was performed at 3T (Magnetom Allegra; Siemens, Erlangen, Germany), with use of a dedicated head coil. The gradient strength was 40 mT/m and slew rate was 400 T/m/s. All children were sedated with an oral mixture of 1 mg/kg of promethazine hydrochloride (Centrafarm Services, Etten-Leur, Netherlands). Axial and coronal fat suppressed T2-weighted MR images were obtained with TR/TE of 4000–4600/19–96 ms, FOV of 20 × 22 cm, section thickness of 3 mm, intersection gap of 1 mm, and matrix of 320 × 260. Diffusion-weighted MR images were obtained using a multisection spin-echo echo-planar imaging sequence. Imaging parameters were TR/TE of 3200/80 ms, FOV of 20 × 22 cm, section thickness of 3 mm, intersection gap of 1 mm, number of excitation of 6, matrix of 128 × 128, EPI factor of 128, and radio-frequency pulse bandwidth of 1200 Hz/pixel. We used the automatic multiangle-projection shim and CHESS technique to reduce the artifacts in diffusion-weighted MR images. Diffusion probing gradients were applied in the 3 orthogonal directions (x, y, and z) with the same strength. Diffusion-weighted MR images were acquired with b factors of 0, 500, and 1000 mm2/s, and ADC maps were automatically generated on the operating console. The data acquisition time for the diffusion-weighted images was 90–120 seconds for all 3 values together. Contrast-enhanced fat-suppressed T1-weighted images (TR/TE of 400–575/13–15 ms) in axial, coronal, and sagittal oblique (along the course of the optic nerves) planes were then obtained following intravenous injection of 0.1 mL/kg of body weight gadopentate dimeglumine (Omniscan; Schering, Berlin, Germany).
Quantitative analysis of the ADC map was performed by 1 radiologist (E.S.) with 15 years' experience in MR imaging. An ROI was manually traced on the ADC map using an electronic cursor (Fig 1). The ROI was smaller in size than actual tumor size to exclude adjacent normal tissue and vitreous. In the case of bilateral tumors, the ADC value of the enucleated eye was used for analysis. In the case of necrotic tumors with heterogeneous contrast enhancement, 3 ROIs were placed within the solid part of the tumor to avoid bias from necrotic elements, which give falsely elevated ADC values; the final ADC value of the tumor was the average of the ADC of these 3 ROIs. The longest diameter of the tumor at contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image was calculated. The tumor diameters were classified as <10 mm, between 10–15 mm, and >15 mm.
One pathologist (H.M.A.) with 12 years' experience in ocular pathology examined all histopathological sections. The data from the whole-eye sections cut parallel to the optic nerve, with a thickness of 6-μm and stained with HE and PAS reaction were analyzed. All histopathologic slides were reviewed for growth pattern of the tumor, degree of tumor differentiation, and extent of choroidal and optic nerve involvement. Regarding growth pattern, tumor growth is endophytic when tumors grow within the vitreous cavity, exophytic when the growth is subretinal, or can be combined. Choroidal invasion is diagnosed by the presence of a tumor between the retina and sclera. Tumor extension into the optic nerve is categorized with reference to the lamina cribrosa as pre- or postlaminar invasion. Tumors were also graded as well differentiated, moderately differentiated, poorly differentiated, or undifferentiated. The degree of tumor differentiation was based on the percentage of differentiated areas (Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes and fleurettes) in relation to the total tumor area.26
Statistical analysis of data was performed using SPSS version 10 (SPSS, Chicago, Illinois). All data were revealed to be parametric with a normal distribution by the Kolmogorov-Smirnov Test. The mean and standard deviation of the ADC value for each prognostic factor (tumor size, bilaterality, growth pattern, choroidal invasion, optic nerve invasion, and degree of differentiation) was calculated. A Student t-test was used to compare 2 groups, and the ANOVA test was used to compare more than 2 groups. The P value was considered significant if ≤.05 at the confidence interval of 95%. Fisher exact correlation test was used to determine the strength of relationship between the ADC value and tumor size and degree of differentiation.
Results
All retinoblastomas were hyperintense on diffusion-weighted images, with b = 1000 mm2/s. The mean ADC value of the retinoblastomas was 0.49 ± 0.12 × 10−3 mm2/s (0.20–0.86 × 10−3 mm2/s). The Table presents the minimum, maximum, mean, and SD of ADC values of the retinoblastomas in relation to previously defined prognostic parameters.6
The well- and moderately differentiated retinoblastomas showed Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes and fleurettes. The poorly differentiated and undifferentiated tumors revealed high nuclear cytoplasmic ratios and hyperchromatic nuclei. The mean ADC value of well-differentiated retinoblastomas (0.54 ± 0.20 × 10−3 mm2/s; Fig 2) and moderately differentiated retinoblatomas (0.51 ± 0.07 × 10−3 mm2/s) was significantly different (P = .007) from poorly differentiated (0.44 ± 0.07 × 10−3 mm2/s) and undifferentiated retinoblastomas (0.41 ± 0.01 × 10−3 mm2/s; Figs 1 and 3). The ADC value of the tumors was well correlated with the degree of tumor differentiation (r = 0.87, P = .007).
The ADC value of small tumors (≤10 mm, n = 11) was 0.55 ± 0.09 × 10−3 mm2/s and of medium-sized tumors (>10 mm to 15 mm, n = 33) was 0.48 ± 0.09 × 10−3 mm2/s (Fig 2). Tumors more than 15 mm (n = 28) had an ADC value of 0.38 ± 0.11 × 10−3 mm2/s. There was a significant difference in the ADC value among small, medium-sized, and large tumors (P = .015), with the ADC value inversely correlated with tumor size (r = −0.68, P = .015).
Retinoblastoma was unilateral in 49 patients and bilateral in 23 patients. Bilateral retinoblastomas were poorly differentiated or undifferentiated in all cases. The ADC value of the retinoblastoma in the enucleated eye in patients with bilateral lesions was 0.35 ± 0.11 × 10−3 mm2/s (Fig 3) and of unilateral retinoblastoma was 0.54 ± 0.12 × 10−3 mm2/s. There was significant difference in the ADC value between bilateral and unilateral retinoblastomas (P = .001).
The ADC value of endophytic tumors (n = 18) was 0.49 ± 0.16 × 10−3 mm2/s and that of exophytic tumors (n = 19) was 0.49 ± 0.11 × 10−3 mm2/s. The ADC of tumors with combined growth pattern (n = 35) was 0.46 ± 0.15 × 10−3 mm2/s. There was no significant difference in the ADC value of endophytic, exophytic, and combined forms of retinoblastoma (P = .640). There was also no significant difference in the ADC of retinoblastoma with or without choroidal invasion (P = .661).
Optic nerve invasion was prelaminar in 15 eyes and postlaminar in 8 eyes. The ADC value of retinoblastoma with pathologically proved postlaminar invasion (0.38 ± 0.11 × 10−3 mm2/s; Fig 4) was lower than that of pathologically proved prelaminar invasion (0.39 ± 0.23 × 10−3 mm2/s), but it did not reach significance. The ADC value of retinoblastoma in patients with optic nerve invasion (0.39 ± 0.15 × 10−3 mm2/s) was, however, significantly different (P = .003) from that of patients without optic nerve invasion (0.50 ± 0.10 × 10−3 mm2/s).
Discussion
Retinoblastomas with high-risk features (including a lack of differentiation, large size, bilaterality, choroidal infiltration, or retrolaminar optic nerve invasion) are likely to have a poor prognosis and clinical outcome.6⇓⇓⇓–10 We evaluated the potential of diffusion-weighted MR imaging to characterize retinoblastoma by determining ADC values and correlating these with traditional prognostic parameters.
Distinction between poorly and well-differentiated tumors impacts both prognosis and treatment planning. Well-differentiated tumors have a good prognosis and are radioresistent, whereas poorly differentiated tumors have a worse prognosis and respond to radiation therapy.27,28 Well-differentiated tumors contain rosettes or fleurettes: Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes are composed of cells arranged in a circular fashion around a well-defined empty central zone, while fleurettes are benign-appearing cells that show photoreceptor differentiation with formation of bouquet-like clusters without mitosis. Poorly differentiated tumors are composed of small round cells with a high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio and hyperchromatic nuclei that are devoid of Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes and fleurettes.28,29 Diffusion-weighted MR imaging is a fast sequence that can be added to routine MR imaging and may provide information about cellularity of the tumor14,15 via the ADC value; the ADC value is correlated with tumor differentiation and this information cannot be obtained with conventional MR imaging. The ADC value of well- or moderately differentiated malignancies has been demonstrated to be significantly different from that of poorly differentiated cancers in many different regions of the body.14,15,23 In this study, the ADC value of poorly and undifferentiated retinoblastoma is statistically different (P = .007) from well- and moderately differentiated tumors. Hypercellularity and enlarged nuclei of poorly differentiated retinoblastomas reduce the extracellular matrix and the diffusion space of water protons in the extracellular and intracellular dimensions, with a resultant decrease in the ADC value of the tumor.
Tumor size is a valuable prognostic factor of retinoblastoma, as larger tumors are typically associated with a worse clinical outcome, and the diameter of 15 mm is commonly used for denoting poor prognosis.6⇓⇓⇓–10 In this study, large tumors had lower ADC values than small tumors, but there is overlap in their ADC values. This may be attributed to large tumors commonly having more compact cells with more restricted diffusion, but they may be associated with microscopic areas of necrosis with potentially free diffusion. A previous study reported that there is a significant difference (P = .001) in the ADC value between small and large invasive ductal carcinomas of the breast.24 On the other hand, there was no significant difference in the ADC value between T stages of lung cancer.25
Bilateral retinoblastomas are generally heritable and accompanied by germ-line mutation of the Rb1 gene, but they may be nonheritable and occur spontaneously. Patients with inherited retinoblastoma present earlier than those with nonheritable tumors. Bilateral retinoblastomas, comprising approximately three-quarters of cases of retinoblastoma, are aggressive tumors that commonly develop metastatic disease.30,31 In this work, the ADC value of bilateral tumors is significantly lower than that of unilateral disease. This was attributable to all bilateral retinoblastomas being poorly or undifferentiated tumors at histopathologic examination, with subsequent lower ADC value than unilateral disease.
In this study, there was no significant difference in the ADC values among the different growth patterns of retinoblastoma, which may be attributable to the effect of retinal detachment and associated subretinal fluid. The growth pattern of retinoblastoma can be described according to the retinal spread of the tumor. Endophytic tumors arise from inner layers of the retina and grow into the vitreous. Exophytic tumors start in the outer layers and growth is in the subretinal space. Exophytic growth patterns increase risk of metastasis due to earlier choroidal involvement and a high percentage of patients develop glaucoma.6⇓⇓⇓–10
Involvement of the choroid increases the risk of metastatic disease because of its rich vascular network, and choroidal invasion is usually associated with a higher mortality rate. Choroidal invasion may be seen as a local thickening of the choroid or a discontinuity in normal linear enhancement beneath the retinoblastoma.4,32,33 In this study, there is no correlation between the degree of choroidal infiltration at histologic analysis and the ADC value of retinoblastoma. This may be attributable to the ADC value being measured from the entire tumor and not just the part of the tumor that invaded the choroid. In addition, choroidal invasion is generally focal, and hence it may have insignificant effect on the ADC value.
Optic nerve invasion, especially postlaminar, is a marker of tumor aggressiveness and is associated with a significant increase in metastatic disease and mortality rate.10,34 Abnormal contrast enhancement and enlargement of the optic nerve are used as diagnostic criteria for postlaminar optic invasion. In this work, lower ADC values are observed in tumors with optic nerve invasion. This may be attributed to retinoblastoma, with optic nerve invasion generally being a poorly differentiated or undifferentiated tumor with higher cellularity than a tumor without optic nerve invasion.
In this study, we applied 3 b-values to obtain 1 ADC map using 3-mm sections and short echo times to improve image quality, and this was facilitated by high-field 3T imaging.14⇓⇓–17 Recent advances in MR software technology at 3T will likely continue to improve image quality and also promise the potential application of multiple and higher b-values than 1000 mm2/s, which may increase diffusion sensitivity and allow further characterization of these tumors on the basis of ADC.
There are several limitations of our study. First, we applied diffusion-weighted MR imaging but did not perform diffusion tensor imaging. Further studies with application of diffusion tensor MR imaging with multichannel coils will likely improve the detection of optic nerve invasion and small lesions. Second, we excluded 3 patients due to susceptibility artifacts, and we expect that future studies with application of parallel imaging will increase image contrast and decrease susceptibility artifacts.14–15 Third, there is potential bias related to ROI selection as well as the presence or absence of retinal detachment, associated subretinal fluid, and/or tumor necrosis. Application of new postprocessing methods such as non-Gaussian (diffusion kurtosis) modeling or K-means clustering algorithms may provide a better characterization of different components of the tumor compared with whole lesion mean ADC value.14,15 Fourth, we have not yet correlated ADC values with genetic studies in bilateral retinoblastomas. Finally, we have not performed any correlation with long-term outcome; further studies with long-term follow-up will be needed to correlate the ADC values with survival of the patients.
Conclusions
The ADC of retinoblastoma correlates with some of the accepted parameters of poor prognosis. Patients with negative prognostic parameters—such as poorly differentiated or undifferentiated tumor, bilaterality, large tumors, and optic nerve invasion—tend to have lower apparent diffusion coefficient. Hence, the ADC can be considered a noninvasive prognostic parameter of retinoblastoma that reflects the degree of tumor differentiation and that may identify highly aggressive tumors.
References
- Received July 14, 2011.
- Accepted after revision August 22, 2011.
- © 2012 by American Journal of Neuroradiology