Preoperative classification of head and neck (HN) tumors remains challenging, especially distinguishing early cancerogenic masses from benign lesions. Synthetic MRI offers a new way for quantitative analysis of tumors. The present study investigated the application of synthetic MRI and stimulus and fast spin echo diffusion-weighted imaging with periodically rotated overlapping parallel lines with enhanced reconstruction (FSE-PROPELLER DWI) to differentiate malignant from benign HN tumors.
Forty-eight patients with pathologically confirmed HN tumors were retrospectively recruited between August 2022 and October 2022. The patients were divided into malignant (n = 28) and benign (n = 20) groups. All patients were scanned using synthetic MRI and FSE-PROPELLER DWI. T1, T2, and proton density (PD) values were acquired on the synthetic MRI and ADC values on the FSE-PROPELLER DWI.
Benign tumors (ADC: 2.03 ± 0.31 × 10-3 mm2/s, T1: 1741.13 ± 662.64 ms, T2: 157.43 ± 72.23 ms) showed higher ADC, T1, and T2 values compared to malignant tumors (ADC: 1.46 ± 0.37 × 10-3 mm2/s, T1: 1390.06 ± 241.09 ms, T2: 97.64 ± 14.91 ms) (all P<0.05), while no differences were seen for PD values. ROC analysis showed that T2+ADC (cut-off value, > 0.55; AUC, 0.950) had optimal diagnostic performance vs. T1 (cut-off value, ≤ 1675.84 ms; AUC, 0.698), T2 (cut-off value, ≤ 113.24 ms; AUC, 0.855) and PD (cut off value, > 80.67 pu; AUC, 0.568) alone in differentiating malignant from benign lesions (all P<0.05); yet, the difference in AUC between ADC and T2+ADC or T2 did not reach statistical significance.
Synthetic MRI and FSE-PROPELLER DWI can quantitatively differentiate malignant from benign HN tumors. T2 value is comparable to ADC value, and T2+ADC values could improve diagnostic efficacy., apparent diffusion coeffificient, head and neck tumors