Spine MRI in Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension for CSF Leak Detection: Nonsuperiority of Intrathecal Gadolinium to Heavily T2-Weighted Fat-Saturated Sequences

Tomas Dobrocky(Professional Beef Services), Anna Winklehner(Professional Beef Services), Philipe S. Breiding(Professional Beef Services), Lorenz Grunder(Professional Beef Services), Giovanni Peschi(Society of Interventional Radiology), Levin Häni(University of Bern), Pascal J. Mosimann(Professional Beef Services), Mattia Branca(University of Bern), Johannes Kaesmacher(Society of Interventional Radiology), Pasquale Mordasini(Professional Beef Services), Andreas Raabe(University of Bern), Christian T. Ulrich(University of Bern), Jürgen Beck(University of Bern), Jan Gralla(Professional Beef Services), Eike I. Piechowiak(Professional Beef Services)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
June 18, 2020
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

<h3>BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:</h3> Spine MR imaging plays a pivotal role in the diagnostic work-up of spontaneous intracranial hypotension. The aim of this study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of unenhanced spine MR imaging and intrathecal gadolinium-enhanced spine MR imaging for identification and localization of CSF leaks in patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension. <h3>MATERIALS AND METHODS:</h3> A retrospective study of patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension examined from February 2013 to October 2017 was conducted. Their spine MR imaging was reviewed by 3 blinded readers for the presence of epidural CSF using 3 different sequences (T2WI, 3D T2WI fat-saturated, T1WI gadolinium). In patients with leaks, the presumed level of the leak was reported. <h3>RESULTS:</h3> In total, 103 patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension (63/103 [61%] women; mean age, 50 years) were evaluated. Seventy had a confirmed CSF leak (57/70 [81%] proved intraoperatively), and 33 showed no epidural CSF on multimodal imaging. Intrathecal gadolinium-enhanced spine MR imaging was nonsuperior to unenhanced spine MR imaging for the detection of epidural CSF (<i>P </i>= .24 and .97). All MR imaging sequences had a low accuracy for leak localization. In all patients, only 1 leakage point was present, albeit multiple suspicious lesions were reported in all sequences (mean, 5.0). <h3>CONCLUSIONS:</h3> Intrathecal gadolinium-enhanced spine MR imaging does not improve the diagnostic accuracy for the detection of epidural CSF. Thus, it lacks a rationale to be included in the routine spontaneous intracranial hypotension work-up. Heavily T2-weighted images with fat saturation provide high accuracy for the detection of an epidural CSF collection. Low accuracy for leak localization is due to an extensive CSF collection spanning several vertebrae (false localizing sign), lack of temporal resolution, and a multiplicity of suspicious lesions, albeit only a single leakage site is present. Thus, dynamic examination is mandatory before targeted treatment is initiated.


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