by Anouk van der Hoorn, Peter Jan van Laar, Gea A. Holtman, Henriette E. Westerlaan
BackgroundNovel advanced MRI techniques are investigated in patients treated for head and neck tumors as conventional anatomical MRI is unreliable to differentiate tumor from treatment related imaging changes.
PurposeAs the diagnostic accuracy of MRI techniques to detect tumor residual or recurrence during or after treatment is variable reported in the literature, we performed a systematic meta-analysis.
Data sourcesPubmed, EMBASE and Web of Science were searched from their first record to September 23th 2014.
Study selectionStudies reporting diagnostic accuracy of anatomical, ADC, perfusion or spectroscopy to identify tumor response confirmed by histology or follow-up in treated patients for head and neck tumors were selected by two authors independently.
Data analysisTwo authors independently performed data extraction including true positives, false positives, true negatives, false negatives and general study characteristics. Meta-analysis was performed using bivariate random effect models when ≥5 studies per test were included.
Data synthesisWe identified 16 relevant studies with anatomical MRI and ADC. No perfusion or spectroscopy studies were identified. Pooled analysis of anatomical MRI of the primary site (11 studies, N = 854) displayed a sensitivity of 84% (95%CI 72–92) and specificity of 82% (71–89). ADC of the primary site (6 studies, N = 287) showed a pooled sensitivity of 89% (74–96) and specificity of 86% (69–94).
LimitationsMain limitation are the low, but comparable quality of the included studies and the variability between the studies.
ConclusionsThe higher diagnostic accuracy of ADC values over anatomical MRI for the primary tumor location emphases the relevance to include DWI with ADC for response evaluation of treated head and neck tumor patients.
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