Diffusion MRI of the facial-vestibulocochlear nerve complex: a prospective clinical validation study

Eur Radiol. 2023 Nov;33(11):8067-8076. doi: 10.1007/s00330-023-09736-4. Epub 2023 Jun 17.

Abstract

Objectives: Surgical planning of vestibular schwannoma surgery would benefit greatly from a robust method of delineating the facial-vestibulocochlear nerve complex with respect to the tumour. This study aimed to optimise a multi-shell readout-segmented diffusion-weighted imaging (rs-DWI) protocol and develop a novel post-processing pipeline to delineate the facial-vestibulocochlear complex within the skull base region, evaluating its accuracy intraoperatively using neuronavigation and tracked electrophysiological recordings.

Methods: In a prospective study of five healthy volunteers and five patients who underwent vestibular schwannoma surgery, rs-DWI was performed and colour tissue maps (CTM) and probabilistic tractography of the cranial nerves were generated. In patients, the average symmetric surface distance (ASSD) and 95% Hausdorff distance (HD-95) were calculated with reference to the neuroradiologist-approved facial nerve segmentation. The accuracy of patient results was assessed intraoperatively using neuronavigation and tracked electrophysiological recordings.

Results: Using CTM alone, the facial-vestibulocochlear complex of healthy volunteer subjects was visualised on 9/10 sides. CTM were generated in all 5 patients with vestibular schwannoma enabling the facial nerve to be accurately identified preoperatively. The mean ASSD between the annotators' two segmentations was 1.11 mm (SD 0.40) and the mean HD-95 was 4.62 mm (SD 1.78). The median distance from the nerve segmentation to a positive stimulation point was 1.21 mm (IQR 0.81-3.27 mm) and 2.03 mm (IQR 0.99-3.84 mm) for the two annotators, respectively.

Conclusions: rs-DWI may be used to acquire dMRI data of the cranial nerves within the posterior fossa.

Clinical relevance statement: Readout-segmented diffusion-weighted imaging and colour tissue mapping provide 1-2 mm spatially accurate imaging of the facial-vestibulocochlear nerve complex, enabling accurate preoperative localisation of the facial nerve. This study evaluated the technique in 5 healthy volunteers and 5 patients with vestibular schwannoma.

Key points: • Readout-segmented diffusion-weighted imaging (rs-DWI) with colour tissue mapping (CTM) visualised the facial-vestibulocochlear nerve complex on 9/10 sides in 5 healthy volunteer subjects. • Using rs-DWI and CTM, the facial nerve was visualised in all 5 patients with vestibular schwannoma and within 1.21-2.03 mm of the nerve's true intraoperative location. • Reproducible results were obtained on different scanners.

Keywords: Cranial nerves; Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic resonance imaging; Vestibular schwannoma.

MeSH terms

  • Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging / methods
  • Facial Nerve / diagnostic imaging
  • Facial Nerve / pathology
  • Humans
  • Neuroma, Acoustic* / diagnostic imaging
  • Neuroma, Acoustic* / pathology
  • Neuroma, Acoustic* / surgery
  • Prospective Studies
  • Vestibulocochlear Nerve / pathology