PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - A.F. Choudhri AU - P. Klimo, Jr AU - T.S. Auschwitz AU - M.T. Whitehead AU - F.A. Boop TI - 3T Intraoperative MRI for Management of Pediatric CNS Neoplasms AID - 10.3174/ajnr.A4040 DP - 2014 Dec 01 TA - American Journal of Neuroradiology PG - 2382--2387 VI - 35 IP - 12 4099 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/35/12/2382.short 4100 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/35/12/2382.full SO - Am. J. Neuroradiol.2014 Dec 01; 35 AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: High-field-strength intraoperative MR imaging has emerged as a powerful adjunct for resection of brain tumors. However, its exact role has not been firmly established. We sought to determine the impact of 3T-intraoperative MRI on the surgical management of childhood CNS tumors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated patient data from a single academic children's hospital during a consecutive 24-month period after installation of a 3T-intraoperative MRI. Tumor location, histology, surgical approach, operating room time, presence and volume of residual tumor, need for tumor and non-tumor-related reoperation, and anesthesia- and MR imaging–related complications were evaluated. Comparison with pre-intraoperative MRI controls was performed. RESULTS: One hundred ninety-four patients underwent intraoperative MRI–guided surgery. Of these, 168 were 18 years or younger (mean, 8.9 ± 5.0 years; 108 males/60 females). There were 65 posterior fossa tumors. The most common tumors were pilocytic astrocytoma (n = 31, 19%), low-grade glioma (n = 31, 19%), and medulloblastoma (n = 20, 12%). An average of 1.2 scanning sessions was performed per patient (maximum, 3). There were no MR imaging–related safety issues. Additional tumor was resected after scanning in 21% of patients. Among patients with a preoperative goal of gross total resection, 93% achieved this goal. The 30-day reoperation rate was <1% (n = 1), and no patient required additional postoperative MR imaging during the same hospital stay. CONCLUSIONS: Intraoperative MRI is safe and increases the likelihood of gross total resection, albeit with increased operating room time, and reduces the need for early reoperation or repeat sedation for postoperative scans in children with brain tumors. FSPGRfast-spoiled gradient recallediMRIintraoperative MRI