Abstract
PURPOSE
To optimize the timing of CT and MR after glioblastoma resection and to define the pattern of tumor regrowth.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS
Sixty-eight patients with glioblastoma were studied prospectively with CT and MR. The first postoperative scan was obtained between day 1 and day 5; follow-up scans were obtained bimonthly.
RESULTS
Residual tumor was shown most reliably on scans obtained shortly after surgery (MR, 77%; CT, 40.5%). After the fourth day up to 3 months postoperatively, surgically induced enhancement prevented recognition of residual tumor. Seventy-five percent of patients with residual tumor shown by early postoperative MR had progressive disease during follow-up, whereas only 36% of patients without evidence of residual tumor had MR signs of progressive disease.
CONCLUSION
Early, enhanced, postoperative MR is the radiologic procedure of choice to determine the extent of glioblastoma resection. Gross total tumor resection as determined by early postoperative MR correlates with a prolongation of life.
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