Efficacy of radiological depth of invasion measurements on magnetic resonance images acquired at different magnetic field strengths and imaging sequences in predicting cervical lymph node metastasis and other outcomes in tongue cancer


Creative Commons License

Cebeci S., Tokgöz N., Pula D., Yazol M., Öğüt B., Şahin M. M., ...More

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral Radiology, vol.136, no.6, pp.731-740, 2023 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier identifier

Abstract

Objectives: We investigated the correlation between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) parameters and tumor pathological depth of invasion (pDOI), between pDOI and radiological DOI (rDOI), between rDOI and duration between biopsy and MRI, and between rDOI and duration between MRI and surgery to determine the efficacy of rDOI in identifying small lesions and other conditions. Study Design: We examined 36 adult patients who had been diagnosed histopathologically with cancer of the tongue and had undergone a glossectomy. Using 1.5 Tesla (T) and 3.0T MRI, we measured rDOI at the deepest infiltration point on 4 MRI sequences. We calculated the correlations between rDOI and the variables examined by Spearman rho analysis and evaluated the diagnostic performance of rDOI by receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. Results: Axial T2-weighted images using 1.5T MRI provided the closest approximation of pDOI. Although the correlation between rDOI and pDOI was significant, rDOI showed poor or acceptable discrimination in identifying small lesions and other conditions. There were no significant correlations between rDOI and the time between biopsy and MRI or between MRI and surgery. Conclusions: The correlation between rDOI and pDOI is significant, but rDOI is ineffective in predicting malignancy and other conditions. Axial T2-weighted images using 1.5T MRI provide the closest approximation of pDOI.