Objective: Meningiomas are highly vascularized tumors which may recruit pial blood supply. Pial supply complicates tumor treatment in numerous ways. The objective of this study was to establish a reliable MRI-based diagnostic score to predict the existence of pial blood supply in supratentorial intracranial meningiomas and then correlate the score with clinical and surgical outcomes and histopathological findings.
Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of supratentorial histologically proven meningiomas in our institution from 2010 to 2018. A score was built based on MRI criteria and correlated with digital subtraction angiography (DSA) pial vascularization assessment. The score was then validated on a second independent population recruited with the same modalities.
Results: Logistic regression identified four parameters related to pial blood supply which were used to build the score: skull base location, tumor size > 45 mm, peritumoral flow voids, and incomplete cerebrospinal fluid rim. The overall diagnostic performance in predicting pial blood supply was as follows: sensitivity 97.8%, specificity 76.9%, predictive positive value 88.2%, negative predictive value 95.2%, and accuracy 90.3%. Inter-reader agreement and Cohen's kappa were good, respectively, of 90.7% and 0.69. A high score was associated with aggressive meningioma (World Health Organization II-III) (p = 0.04) and with greater importance of pial supply relative to dural supply.
Conclusions: We have identified a reliable way to use MRI to predict the existence of pial blood supply in supratentorial intracranial meningiomas. A higher score also predicted higher grade meningioma.
Key points: • Accurate and reproducible MRI score composed of four items to predict the existence of pial blood supply in supratentorial meningioma. • High score is associated with high-grade meningioma (WHO II-III) but also with greater importance of pial supply relative to dural supply.
Keywords: Magnetic resonance imaging; Meningioma; Retrospective studies; Supratentorial neoplasms.