45 results on '"de Mey, Johan"'
Search Results
2. The ability of computed tomography angiography to predict 5-year mortality in the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial
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Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, Onuma, Yoshinobu, Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, and Onuma, Yoshinobu
- Abstract
Background The feasibility of using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) for long-term prediction of vital prognosis post-revascularization remains unknown. Objectives To compare the prognostic value of the SYNTAX score II 2020 (SS-2020) derived from invasive coronary angiography (ICA) or CCTA in patients with three-vessel disease and/or left main coronary artery disease undergoing percutaneous or surgical revascularization. Methods In the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial, the probability of death at five years was retrospectively assessed by calculating the SS-2020 using ICA and CCTA. High- and low-risk patients for mortality were categorized according to the median percentages of predicted mortality based on both modalities. The discriminative abilities of the SS-2020 were assessed using Harrell's C statistic. Results The vital status at five years of the 215 patients revascularized percutaneously (64 patients, 29.8%) or surgically (151 patients, 70.2%) was established through national registries. In patients undergoing revascularization, the SS-2020 was possibly helpful in discriminating vital prognosis at 5 years, with similar results seen with ICA and CCTA (C-index with ICA = 0.75, intercept = −0.19, slope = 0.92 and C-index with CCTA = 0.75, intercept = −0.22, slope = 0.99). In high- and low-risk patients, Kaplan-Meier estimates showed significant, and almost identical relative differences in observed mortality, irrespective of imaging modality (ICA: 93.8% vs 78.7%, log-lank P < 0.001; CCTA: 93.7% vs 78.5%, log-lank P < 0.001). Conclusions The predictive ability of the SS-2020 for five-year all-cause mortality derived from ICA and CCTA was comparable, and could helpfully discriminate vital prognosis in high- and low-risk patients.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Comparison of intra- and inter-patient intensity standardization methods for multi-parametric whole-body MRI.
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Ceranka, Jakub, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Ceranka, Jakub, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
Objective.To test and compare different intensity standardization approaches for whole-body multi-parametric MR images, aiming to compensate voxel intensity differences between scans. These differences, common for magnetic resonance imaging, pose problems in image quantification, assessment of changes between a baseline and follow-up scan, and hinder performance of image processing and machine learning algorithms.Approach.In this work, we present a comparison on the accuracy of intensity standardization approaches with increasing complexity, for intra- and inter-patient multi-parametric whole-body MRI. Several approaches were used: z-scoring of the intensities, piecewise linear mapping and deformable mapping of intensity distributions into established reference intensity space. For each method, the impact on standardization algorithm on the use of single image or average population distribution reference; as well as, whole image and region of interest were additionally investigated. All methods were validated on a data set of 18 whole-body anatomical and diffusion-weighted MR scans consisting of baseline and follow-up examinations acquired from advanced prostate cancer patients and healthy volunteers.Main results.The piecewise linear intensity standardisation approach provided the best compromise between standardization accuracy and method stability, with average deviations in intensity profile of 0.011-0.027 and mean absolute difference of 0.29-0.37 standard score (intra-patient) and 0.014-0.056 (inter-patient), depending on the type of used MR modality.Significance.Linear piecewise approaches showed the overall best performance across multiple validation metrics, mostly because of its robustness. The inter-patient standardization proved to perform better when using population average reference image; in contrary to intra-patient approach, where the best results were achieved by standardizing towards a reference image taken as the baseline scan., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2023
4. The ability of computed tomography angiography to predict 5-year mortality in the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial
- Author
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Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, Onuma, Yoshinobu, Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, and Onuma, Yoshinobu
- Abstract
Background The feasibility of using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) for long-term prediction of vital prognosis post-revascularization remains unknown. Objectives To compare the prognostic value of the SYNTAX score II 2020 (SS-2020) derived from invasive coronary angiography (ICA) or CCTA in patients with three-vessel disease and/or left main coronary artery disease undergoing percutaneous or surgical revascularization. Methods In the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial, the probability of death at five years was retrospectively assessed by calculating the SS-2020 using ICA and CCTA. High- and low-risk patients for mortality were categorized according to the median percentages of predicted mortality based on both modalities. The discriminative abilities of the SS-2020 were assessed using Harrell's C statistic. Results The vital status at five years of the 215 patients revascularized percutaneously (64 patients, 29.8%) or surgically (151 patients, 70.2%) was established through national registries. In patients undergoing revascularization, the SS-2020 was possibly helpful in discriminating vital prognosis at 5 years, with similar results seen with ICA and CCTA (C-index with ICA = 0.75, intercept = −0.19, slope = 0.92 and C-index with CCTA = 0.75, intercept = −0.22, slope = 0.99). In high- and low-risk patients, Kaplan-Meier estimates showed significant, and almost identical relative differences in observed mortality, irrespective of imaging modality (ICA: 93.8% vs 78.7%, log-lank P < 0.001; CCTA: 93.7% vs 78.5%, log-lank P < 0.001). Conclusions The predictive ability of the SS-2020 for five-year all-cause mortality derived from ICA and CCTA was comparable, and could helpfully discriminate vital prognosis in high- and low-risk patients.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The ability of computed tomography angiography to predict 5-year mortality in the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial
- Author
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Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, Onuma, Yoshinobu, Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Mushtaq, Saima, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mandry, Damien, Buechel, Ronny R., Digne, Franck, Schneider, Ulrich, Pompilio, Giulio, La Meir, Mark, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgraber, Ulf, Morel, Marie-Angele, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Kageyama, Shigetaka, O’Leary, Neil, Collet, Carlos, Garg, Scot, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, and Onuma, Yoshinobu
- Abstract
Background The feasibility of using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) for long-term prediction of vital prognosis post-revascularization remains unknown. Objectives To compare the prognostic value of the SYNTAX score II 2020 (SS-2020) derived from invasive coronary angiography (ICA) or CCTA in patients with three-vessel disease and/or left main coronary artery disease undergoing percutaneous or surgical revascularization. Methods In the SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial, the probability of death at five years was retrospectively assessed by calculating the SS-2020 using ICA and CCTA. High- and low-risk patients for mortality were categorized according to the median percentages of predicted mortality based on both modalities. The discriminative abilities of the SS-2020 were assessed using Harrell's C statistic. Results The vital status at five years of the 215 patients revascularized percutaneously (64 patients, 29.8%) or surgically (151 patients, 70.2%) was established through national registries. In patients undergoing revascularization, the SS-2020 was possibly helpful in discriminating vital prognosis at 5 years, with similar results seen with ICA and CCTA (C-index with ICA = 0.75, intercept = −0.19, slope = 0.92 and C-index with CCTA = 0.75, intercept = −0.22, slope = 0.99). In high- and low-risk patients, Kaplan-Meier estimates showed significant, and almost identical relative differences in observed mortality, irrespective of imaging modality (ICA: 93.8% vs 78.7%, log-lank P < 0.001; CCTA: 93.7% vs 78.5%, log-lank P < 0.001). Conclusions The predictive ability of the SS-2020 for five-year all-cause mortality derived from ICA and CCTA was comparable, and could helpfully discriminate vital prognosis in high- and low-risk patients.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Diffusion-weighted MRI in assessing adnexal masses and breast cancers
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Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Sculier, Jean-Paul, Bali, Maria Antonietta, Noël, Jean Christophe, Fastrez, Maxime, De Mey, Johan, Vandecaveye, Vincent, Hottat, Nathalie, Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Sculier, Jean-Paul, Bali, Maria Antonietta, Noël, Jean Christophe, Fastrez, Maxime, De Mey, Johan, Vandecaveye, Vincent, and Hottat, Nathalie
- Abstract
Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a proven, quick, and noninvasive tech-nique which requires no ionizing radiation or contrast media administration and is able to de-tect, characterize and stage malignant tumors, and to monitor treatment response. Over the two last decades, many clinical applications of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) have emerged in the field of women’s oncology. This technique provides both qualitative and quanti-tative information offering a promising new tumor biomarker in clinical routine. This thesis work was therefore conducted to demonstrate the critical role of DWI in the man-agement of adnexal masses and breast cancers. The dissertation is divided into 5 chapters. Chapter 1 presents the general background. Chapter 2 is dedicated to the contribution of DWI in assessing adnexal masses. Chapter 3 is focused on the role of DWI in the evaluation of breast cancer response to neoadjuvant treatments with emphasis on the early response to neoadju-vant chemotherapy (NAC) and to neoadjuvant radiotherapy. Chapter 4 explores the performance of whole-body MRI (WB-MRI) including DWI in the initial staging of breast cancer patients at high risk of metastasis. Chapter 5 contains the discussion, future perspectives, and general con-clusion.Initially, we validated prospectively the ADNEX MR scoring system in the assessment of inde-terminate ovarian and adnexal masses with ultrasound (US) in 323 patients. We also evaluated a new, modified ADNEX MR scoring system that incorporates DWI including apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) mapping. It showed an improvement of the classical ADNEX MR scoring sys-tem in diagnosing lesions with a score of 4 or 5 when adding DWI data analysis including ADC mapping, from 95.5% sensitivity and 86.6% specificity to 95.7% and 93.3%, respectively.Afterwards, we evaluated the added value of quantitative DWI in the diagnosis of indetermi-nate adnexal masses with US in a cohort of 163 patients with 201, Doctorat en Sciences médicales (Médecine), info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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- 2023
7. Impact of coronary calcification assessed by coronary CT angiography on treatment decision in patients with three-vessel CAD:insights from SYNTAX III trial
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Andreini, Daniele, Takahashi, Kuniaki, Mushtaq, Saima, Conte, Edoardo, Modolo, Rodrigo, Sonck, Jeroen, De Mey, Johan, Ravagnani, Paolo, Schoors, Danny, Maisano, Francesco, Kaufmann, Philipp, Lindeboom, Wietze, Morel, Marie Angele, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgräber, Ulf, Pontone, Gianluca, Pompilio, Giulio, Bartorelli, Antonio, Onuma, Yoshinobu, Serruys, Patrick W., Andreini, Daniele, Takahashi, Kuniaki, Mushtaq, Saima, Conte, Edoardo, Modolo, Rodrigo, Sonck, Jeroen, De Mey, Johan, Ravagnani, Paolo, Schoors, Danny, Maisano, Francesco, Kaufmann, Philipp, Lindeboom, Wietze, Morel, Marie Angele, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgräber, Ulf, Pontone, Gianluca, Pompilio, Giulio, Bartorelli, Antonio, Onuma, Yoshinobu, and Serruys, Patrick W.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine Syntax scores based on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and invasive coronary angiography (ICA) and to assess whether heavy coronary calcification significantly limits the CCTA evaluation and the impact of severe calcification on heart team's treatment decision and procedural planning in patients with three-vessel coronary artery disease (CAD) with or without left main disease. METHODS: SYNTAX III was a multicentre, international study that included patients with three-vessel CAD with or without left main disease. The heart teams were randomized to either assess coronary arteries with coronary CCTA or ICA. We stratified the patients based on the presence of at least 1 lesion with heavy calcification defined as arc of calcium >180° within the lesion using CCTA. Agreement on the anatomical SYNTAX score and treatment decision was compared between patients with and without heavy calcifications. RESULTS: Overall, 222 patients with available CCTA and ICA were included in this trial subanalysis (104 with heavy calcification, 118 without heavy calcification). The mean difference in the anatomical SYNTAX score (CCTA derived-ICA derived) was lower in patients without heavy calcifications [mean (-1.96 SD; +1.96 SD) = 1.5 (-19.3; 22.4) vs 5.9 (-17.5; +29.3), P = 0.004]. The agreement on treatment decision did not differ between patients with (Cohen's kappa 0.79) or without coronary calcifications (Cohen's kappa 0.84). The agreement on the treatment planning did not differ between patients with (concordance 80.3%) or without coronary calcifications (concordance 82.8%). CONCLUSIONS: An overall good correlation between CCTA- and ICA-derived Syntax score was found. The presence of heavy coronary calcification moderately influenced the agreement between CCTA and ICA on the anatomical SYNTAX score. However, agreement on the treatment decision and planning was high and irrespective of the presence of calcified les
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- 2022
8. T2-weighted turbo spin-echo magnetic resonance imaging of canine brain anatomy at 1.5T, 3T, and 7T field strengths
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Divisie Beeld, Jacqmot, Olivier, Van Thielen, Bert, Hespel, Adrien-Maxence, Luijten, Peter R, de Mey, Johan, Van Binst, Anne, Provyn, Steven, Tresignie, Jonathan, Divisie Beeld, Jacqmot, Olivier, Van Thielen, Bert, Hespel, Adrien-Maxence, Luijten, Peter R, de Mey, Johan, Van Binst, Anne, Provyn, Steven, and Tresignie, Jonathan
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- 2022
9. Repeatability and reproducibility of ADC measurements: a prospective multicenter whole-body-MRI study.
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UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Michoux, Nicolas F, Ceranka, Jakub W, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Peeters, Frank, Lu, Pierre, Absil, Julie, Triqueneaux, Perrine, Liu, Yan, Collette, Laurence, Willekens, Inneke, Brussaard, Carola, Debeir, Olivier, Hahn, Stephan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, de Mey, Johan, Metens, Thierry, Lecouvet, Frédéric E, UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Michoux, Nicolas F, Ceranka, Jakub W, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Peeters, Frank, Lu, Pierre, Absil, Julie, Triqueneaux, Perrine, Liu, Yan, Collette, Laurence, Willekens, Inneke, Brussaard, Carola, Debeir, Olivier, Hahn, Stephan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, de Mey, Johan, Metens, Thierry, and Lecouvet, Frédéric E
- Abstract
Multicenter oncology trials increasingly include MRI examinations with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) quantification for lesion characterization and follow-up. However, the repeatability and reproducibility (R&R) limits above which a true change in ADC can be considered relevant are poorly defined. This study assessed these limits in a standardized whole-body (WB)-MRI protocol. A prospective, multicenter study was performed at three centers equipped with the same 3.0-T scanners to test a WB-MRI protocol including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Eight healthy volunteers per center were enrolled to undergo test and retest examinations in the same center and a third examination in another center. ADC variability was assessed in multiple organs by two readers using two-way mixed ANOVA, Bland-Altman plots, coefficient of variation (CoV), and the upper limit of the 95% CI on repeatability (RC) and reproducibility (RDC) coefficients. CoV of ADC was not influenced by other factors (center, reader) than the organ. Based on the upper limit of the 95% CI on RC and RDC (from both readers), a change in ADC in an individual patient must be superior to 12% (cerebrum white matter), 16% (paraspinal muscle), 22% (renal cortex), 26% (central and peripheral zones of the prostate), 29% (renal medulla), 35% (liver), 45% (spleen), 50% (posterior iliac crest), 66% (L5 vertebra), 68% (femur), and 94% (acetabulum) to be significant. This study proposes R&R limits above which ADC changes can be considered as a reliable quantitative endpoint to assess disease or treatment-related changes in the tissue microstructure in the setting of multicenter WB-MRI trials. • The present study showed the range of R&R of ADC in WB-MRI that may be achieved in a multicenter framework when a standardized protocol is deployed. • R&R was not influenced by the site of acquisition of DW images. • Clinically significant changes in ADC measured in a multicenter WB-MRI protocol performed with the same type of
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- 2021
10. Repeatability and reproducibility of ADC measurements: a prospective multicenter whole-body-MRI study
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Michoux, Nicolas, Ceranka, Jakub, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Peeters, Frank, Lu, Pierre, Absil, Julie, Triqueneaux, Perrine, Liu, Yan, Collette, Laurence, Willekens, Inneke, Brussaard, C., Debeir, Olivier, Hahn, Stéphan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, de Mey, Johan, Metens, Thierry, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, Ceranka, Jakub, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Peeters, Frank, Lu, Pierre, Absil, Julie, Triqueneaux, Perrine, Liu, Yan, Collette, Laurence, Willekens, Inneke, Brussaard, C., Debeir, Olivier, Hahn, Stéphan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, de Mey, Johan, Metens, Thierry, and Lecouvet, Frédéric
- Abstract
Multicenter oncology trials increasingly include MRI examinations with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) quantification for lesion characterization and follow-up. However, the repeatability and reproducibility (R&R) limits above which a true change in ADC can be considered relevant are poorly defined. This study assessed these limits in a standardized whole-body (WB)-MRI protocol., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2021
11. Synthetic MRI demonstrates prolonged regional relaxation times in the brain of preterm born neonates with severe postnatal morbidity
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MS Neonatologie, Brain, Child Health, Vanderhasselt, Tim, Zolfaghari, Roya, Naeyaert, Maarten, Dudink, Jeroen, Buls, Nico, Allemeersch, Gert-Jan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Cools, Filip, de Mey, Johan, MS Neonatologie, Brain, Child Health, Vanderhasselt, Tim, Zolfaghari, Roya, Naeyaert, Maarten, Dudink, Jeroen, Buls, Nico, Allemeersch, Gert-Jan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Cools, Filip, and de Mey, Johan
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- 2021
12. Multi-atlas segmentation of the skeleton from whole-body MRI-Impact of iterative background masking.
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UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, Absil, Julie, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, Absil, Julie, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
PURPOSE: To improve multi-atlas segmentation of the skeleton from whole-body MRI. In particular, we study the effect of employing the atlas segmentations to iteratively mask tissues outside of the region of interest to improve the atlas alignment and subsequent segmentation. METHODS: An improved atlas registration scheme is proposed. Starting from a suitable initial alignment, the alignment is refined by introducing additional stages of deformable registration during which the image sampling is limited to the dilated atlas segmentation label mask. The performance of the method was demonstrated using leave-one-out cross-validation using atlases of 10 whole-body 3D-T1 images of prostate cancer patients with bone metastases and healthy male volunteers, and compared to existing state of the art. Both registration accuracy and resulting segmentation quality, using four commonly used label fusion strategies, were evaluated. RESULTS: The proposed method showed significant improvement in registration and segmentation accuracy with respect to the state of the art for all validation criteria and label fusion strategies, resulting in a Dice coefficient of 0.887 (STEPS label fusion). The average Dice coefficient for the multi-atlas segmentation showed over 11% improvement with a decrease of false positive rate from 28.3% to 13.2%. For this application, repeated application of the background masking did not lead to significant improvement of the segmentation result. CONCLUSIONS: A registration strategy, relying on the use of atlas segmentations as mask during image registration was proposed and evaluated for multi-atlas segmentation of whole-body MRI. The approach significantly improved registration and final segmentation accuracy and may be applicable to other structures of interest.
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- 2020
13. Computer-aided detection of focal bone metastases from whole-body multi-modal MRI
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UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Ceranka, Jakub, Lecouvet, Frederic, De Mey, Johan, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Hahn, Horst K., Mazurowski, Maciej A., UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, Ceranka, Jakub, Lecouvet, Frederic, De Mey, Johan, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Hahn, Horst K., and Mazurowski, Maciej A.
- Abstract
The confident detection and monitoring of metastatic bone disease remains one of the major unfulfilled needs in oncology. Whole-body MRI offers excellent resolution and sensitivity for the detection of neoplastic cells within the bone marrow using so-called anatomical sequences. In combination with whole-body diffusion-weighted functional sequences, it has shown a great potential in the assessment of patient tumor involvement. However, metastatic bone disease can lead to a large amount of bone lesions spread across the skeleton, making it impractical and labor demanding to manually delineate by a radiologist. Computer-aided detection could alleviate the workflow, enabling automatic, accurate and reproducible study of the patient tumor load. In this paper, we propose a fully automated computer-aided detection system for bone metastases composed of two steps. First, whole-body multi-modal MR image preprocessing is performed consisting of intra- and inter-modality image spatial registration, intensity standardization and atlas-based segmentation of the skeleton. The second stage detects the metastases candidates using random forest voxel classification algorithm. The system is evaluated on the dataset of 6 male advanced prostate cancer patients with metastases to the bone using a leave-one-patient-out cross-validation with manual segmentation of the metastases as the reference standard. The proposed system showed metastases detection sensitivity of 0.74 with a median false positive rate of 9.67. In clinical workflow the system could potentially be used as the initial screening and treatment response assessment tool for whole-body multi-modal MRI of any advanced cancer with metastases to the bone
- Published
- 2020
14. Comparative study of deep learning methods for the automatic segmentation of lung, lesion and lesion type in CT scans of COVID-19 patients
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Tilborghs, Sofie, Dirks, Ine, Fidon, Lucas, Willems, Siri, Eelbode, Tom, Bertels, Jeroen, Ilsen, Bart, Brys, Arne, Dubbeldam, Adriana, Buls, Nico, Gonidakis, Panagiotis, Sánchez, Sebastián Amador, Snoeckx, Annemiek, Parizel, Paul M., de Mey, Johan, Vandermeulen, Dirk, Vercauteren, Tom, Robben, David, Smeets, Dirk, Maes, Frederik, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Suetens, Paul, Tilborghs, Sofie, Dirks, Ine, Fidon, Lucas, Willems, Siri, Eelbode, Tom, Bertels, Jeroen, Ilsen, Bart, Brys, Arne, Dubbeldam, Adriana, Buls, Nico, Gonidakis, Panagiotis, Sánchez, Sebastián Amador, Snoeckx, Annemiek, Parizel, Paul M., de Mey, Johan, Vandermeulen, Dirk, Vercauteren, Tom, Robben, David, Smeets, Dirk, Maes, Frederik, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, and Suetens, Paul
- Abstract
Recent research on COVID-19 suggests that CT imaging provides useful information to assess disease progression and assist diagnosis, in addition to help understanding the disease. There is an increasing number of studies that propose to use deep learning to provide fast and accurate quantification of COVID-19 using chest CT scans. The main tasks of interest are the automatic segmentation of lung and lung lesions in chest CT scans of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 patients. In this study, we compare twelve deep learning algorithms using a multi-center dataset, including both open-source and in-house developed algorithms. Results show that ensembling different methods can boost the overall test set performance for lung segmentation, binary lesion segmentation and multiclass lesion segmentation, resulting in mean Dice scores of 0.982, 0.724 and 0.469, respectively. The resulting binary lesions were segmented with a mean absolute volume error of 91.3 ml. In general, the task of distinguishing different lesion types was more difficult, with a mean absolute volume difference of 152 ml and mean Dice scores of 0.369 and 0.523 for consolidation and ground glass opacity, respectively. All methods perform binary lesion segmentation with an average volume error that is better than visual assessment by human raters, suggesting these methods are mature enough for a large-scale evaluation for use in clinical practice., Comment: Updated acknowledgments
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- 2020
15. Explainable-by-design Semi-Supervised Representation Learning for COVID-19 Diagnosis from CT Imaging
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Berenguer, Abel Díaz, Sahli, Hichem, Joukovsky, Boris, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Dirks, Ine, Alioscha-Perez, Mitchel, Deligiannis, Nikos, Gonidakis, Panagiotis, Sánchez, Sebastián Amador, Brahimetaj, Redona, Papavasileiou, Evgenia, Chana, Jonathan Cheung-Wai, Li, Fei, Song, Shangzhen, Yang, Yixin, Tilborghs, Sofie, Willems, Siri, Eelbode, Tom, Bertels, Jeroen, Vandermeulen, Dirk, Maes, Frederik, Suetens, Paul, Fidon, Lucas, Vercauteren, Tom, Robben, David, Brys, Arne, Smeets, Dirk, Ilsen, Bart, Buls, Nico, Watté, Nina, de Mey, Johan, Snoeckx, Annemiek, Parizel, Paul M., Guiot, Julien, Deprez, Louis, Meunier, Paul, Gryspeerdt, Stefaan, De Smet, Kristof, Jansen, Bart, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Berenguer, Abel Díaz, Sahli, Hichem, Joukovsky, Boris, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Dirks, Ine, Alioscha-Perez, Mitchel, Deligiannis, Nikos, Gonidakis, Panagiotis, Sánchez, Sebastián Amador, Brahimetaj, Redona, Papavasileiou, Evgenia, Chana, Jonathan Cheung-Wai, Li, Fei, Song, Shangzhen, Yang, Yixin, Tilborghs, Sofie, Willems, Siri, Eelbode, Tom, Bertels, Jeroen, Vandermeulen, Dirk, Maes, Frederik, Suetens, Paul, Fidon, Lucas, Vercauteren, Tom, Robben, David, Brys, Arne, Smeets, Dirk, Ilsen, Bart, Buls, Nico, Watté, Nina, de Mey, Johan, Snoeckx, Annemiek, Parizel, Paul M., Guiot, Julien, Deprez, Louis, Meunier, Paul, Gryspeerdt, Stefaan, De Smet, Kristof, Jansen, Bart, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
Our motivating application is a real-world problem: COVID-19 classification from CT imaging, for which we present an explainable Deep Learning approach based on a semi-supervised classification pipeline that employs variational autoencoders to extract efficient feature embedding. We have optimized the architecture of two different networks for CT images: (i) a novel conditional variational autoencoder (CVAE) with a specific architecture that integrates the class labels inside the encoder layers and uses side information with shared attention layers for the encoder, which make the most of the contextual clues for representation learning, and (ii) a downstream convolutional neural network for supervised classification using the encoder structure of the CVAE. With the explainable classification results, the proposed diagnosis system is very effective for COVID-19 classification. Based on the promising results obtained qualitatively and quantitatively, we envisage a wide deployment of our developed technique in large-scale clinical studies.Code is available at https://git.etrovub.be/AVSP/ct-based-covid-19-diagnostic-tool.git.
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- 2020
16. Safety and feasibility evaluation of planning and execution of surgical revascularisation solely based on coronary CTA and FFR CT in patients with complex coronary artery disease: study protocol of the FASTTRACK CABG study
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Kawashima, Hideyuki, Pompilio, Giulio, Andreini, Daniele, Bartorelli, Antonio L, Mushtaq, Saima, Ferrari, Enrico, Maisano, Francesco, Buechel, Ronny R, Tanaka, Kaoru, La Meir, Mark, De Mey, Johan, Schneider, Ulrich, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgräber, Ulf, Stone, Gregg W, Sharif, Faisal, de Winter, Robbert, Thomsen, Brian, Taylor, Charles, Rogers, Campbell, Leipsic, Jonathon, Wijns, William, Onuma, Yoshinobu, Serruys, Patrick W; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9636-1104, Kawashima, Hideyuki, Pompilio, Giulio, Andreini, Daniele, Bartorelli, Antonio L, Mushtaq, Saima, Ferrari, Enrico, Maisano, Francesco, Buechel, Ronny R, Tanaka, Kaoru, La Meir, Mark, De Mey, Johan, Schneider, Ulrich, Doenst, Torsten, Teichgräber, Ulf, Stone, Gregg W, Sharif, Faisal, de Winter, Robbert, Thomsen, Brian, Taylor, Charles, Rogers, Campbell, Leipsic, Jonathon, Wijns, William, Onuma, Yoshinobu, and Serruys, Patrick W; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9636-1104
- Abstract
Introduction: The previously published SYNTAX III REVOLUTION trial demonstrated that clinical decision-making between coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) and percutaneous coronary intervention based on coronary CT angiography (CCTA) had a very high agreement with the treatment decision derived from invasive coronary angiography (ICA). The study objective of the FASTTRACK CABG is to assess the feasibility of CCTA and fractional flow reserve derived from CTA (FFRCT) to replace ICA as a surgical guidance method for planning and execution of CABG in patients with three-vessel disease with or without left main disease. Methods and analysis: The FASTTRACK CABG is an investigator-initiated single-arm, multicentre, prospective, proof-of-concept and first-in-man study with feasibility and safety analysis. Surgical revascularisation strategy and treatment planning will be solely based on CCTA and FFRCT without knowledge of the anatomy defined by ICA. Clinical follow-up visit including CCTA will be performed 30 days after CABG in order to assess graft patency and adequacy of the revascularisation with respect to the surgical planning based on non-invasive imaging (CCTA) with functional assessment (FFRCT) and compared with ICA. Primary feasibility endpoint is CABG planning and execution solely based on CCTA and FFRCT in 114 patients. Primary safety endpoint based on 30 day CCTA is graft assessment and topographical adequacy of the revascularisation procedure. Automatic non-invasive assessment of functional coronary anatomy complexity is also evaluated with FFRCT for functional Synergy Between percutaneous coronary intervention With Taxus and Cardiac Surgery Score assessment on CCTA. CCTA with FFRCT might provide better anatomical and functional analysis of the coronary circulation leading to appropriate anatomical and functional revascularisation, and thereby contributing to a better outcome. Ethics and dissemination: Each patient has to provide written informed consent as appr
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- 2020
17. Improving the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease in below-the-knee arteries by adding time-resolved CT scan series to conventional run-off CT angiography. First experience with a 256-slice CT scanner
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Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, de Mey, Johan, Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, and de Mey, Johan
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- 2019
18. Improving the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease in below-the-knee arteries by adding time-resolved CT scan series to conventional run-off CT angiography. First experience with a 256-slice CT scanner
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Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, de Mey, Johan, Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, and de Mey, Johan
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- 2019
19. Improving the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease in below-the-knee arteries by adding time-resolved CT scan series to conventional run-off CT angiography. First experience with a 256-slice CT scanner
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Researchgr. Cardiovasculaire Radiologie, Circulatory Health, Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, de Mey, Johan, Researchgr. Cardiovasculaire Radiologie, Circulatory Health, Buls, Nico, de Brucker, Yannick, Aerden, Dimitri, Devos, Hannes, Van Gompel, Gert, Boonen, Pieter Thomas, Nieboer, Koenraad, Leiner, Tim, and de Mey, Johan
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- 2019
20. Multi-atlas segmentation of the skeleton from whole-body MRI-Impact of iterative background masking.
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Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, Absil, Julie, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Kvasnytsia, Maryna, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Raeymaekers, Hubert, Metens, Thierry, Absil, Julie, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
To improve multi-atlas segmentation of the skeleton from whole-body MRI. In particular, we study the effect of employing the atlas segmentations to iteratively mask tissues outside of the region of interest to improve the atlas alignment and subsequent segmentation., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2019
21. Intensity standardization of skeleton in follow-up whole-body MRI
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Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Metens, Thierry, De Mey, Johan, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Ceranka, Jakub, Verga, Sabrina, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Metens, Thierry, De Mey, Johan, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
The value of whole-body MRI is constantly growing and is currently employed in several bone pathologies including diagnosis and prognosis of multiple myeloma, musculoskeletal imaging and evaluation of treatment response assessment in bone metastases. Intra-patient follow-up MR images acquired over time do not only suffer from spatial misalignments caused by change in patient positioning and body composition, but also intensity inhomogeneities, making the absolute MR intensity values inherently non-comparable. The non-quantitative nature of whole-body MRI makes it difficult to derive reproducible measurement and limits the use of treatment response maps. In this work, we have investigated and compared the performance of several standardization algorithms for skeletal tissue in anatomical and diffusion-weighted whole-body MRI. The investigated method consists of two steps. First, the follow-up whole-body image is spatially registered to a baseline image using B-spline deformable registration. Secondly, an intensity standardization algorithm based on a histogram matching is applied to the follow-up image. Additionally, the use of a skeleton mask was introduced, in order to focus the accuracy of algorithms on a tissue of interest. A linear piecewise matching method using masked skeletal region showed a superior performance in comparison to the other evaluated intensity standardization methods. The proposed work helps to overcome the non-quantitative nature of whole-body MRI images, allowing for extraction of important image parameters, visualization of whole-body MR treatment response maps and assessment of severity of bone pathology based on MR intensity profile., SCOPUS: cp.k, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2019
22. Registration strategies for multi-modal whole-body MRI mosaicing.
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UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - SSS/IONS/NEUR - Clinical Neuroscience, Ceranka, Jakub, Polfliet, Mathias, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie, UCL - SSS/IONS/NEUR - Clinical Neuroscience, Ceranka, Jakub, Polfliet, Mathias, Lecouvet, Frédéric, Michoux, Nicolas, de Mey, Johan, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
PURPOSE: To test and compare different registration approaches for performing whole-body diffusion-weighted (wbDWI) image station mosaicing, and its alignment to corresponding anatomical T1 whole-body image. METHODS: Four different registration strategies aiming at mosaicing of diffusion-weighted image stations, and their alignment to the corresponding whole-body anatomical image, were proposed and evaluated. These included two-step approaches, where diffusion-weighted stations are first combined in a pairwise (Strategy 1) or groupwise (Strategy 2) manner and later non-rigidly aligned to the anatomical image; a direct pairwise mapping of DWI stations onto the anatomical image (Strategy 3); and simultaneous mosaicing of DWI and alignment to the anatomical image (Strategy 4). Additionally, different images driving the registration were investigated. Experiments were performed for 20 whole-body images of patients with bone metastases. RESULTS: Strategies 1 and 2 showed significant improvement in mosaicing accuracy with respect to the non-registered images (P < 0.006). Strategy 2 based on ADC images increased the alignment accuracy between DWI stations and the T1 whole-body image (P = 0.0009). CONCLUSIONS: A two-step registration strategy, relying on groupwise mosaicing of the ADC stations and subsequent registration to T1 , provided the best compromise between whole-body DWI image quality and multi-modal alignment. Magn Reson Med, 2017. © 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
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- 2018
23. Computational Methods and Clinical Applications for Spine Imaging: Intensity Standardization of Skeleton in Follow-Up Whole-Body MRI
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Ceranka, Jakub, Metens, Thierry, Lecouvet, Frédéric, De Mey, Johan, Vandemeulebroucke, Jef, Ceranka, Jakub, Metens, Thierry, Lecouvet, Frédéric, De Mey, Johan, and Vandemeulebroucke, Jef
- Abstract
info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2018
24. RESEARCH PROJECT: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ASD AND ADHD.
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Autism Research Workshop (2016: Ghent University), Albajara Saenz, Ariadna, Baijot, Simon, Slama, Hichem, Villemonteix, Thomas, Victoor, Laurent, Septier, Mathilde, Delvenne, Véronique, Deconinck, Nicolas, Defresne, Pierre, Willaye, Eric, De Mey, Johan, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Peigneux, Philippe, Massat, Isabelle, Autism Research Workshop (2016: Ghent University), Albajara Saenz, Ariadna, Baijot, Simon, Slama, Hichem, Villemonteix, Thomas, Victoor, Laurent, Septier, Mathilde, Delvenne, Véronique, Deconinck, Nicolas, Defresne, Pierre, Willaye, Eric, De Mey, Johan, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Peigneux, Philippe, and Massat, Isabelle
- Abstract
info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2016
25. Potential heating effect in the gravid uterus by using 3-T MR imaging protocols: Experimental study in miniature pigs
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Cannie, Mieke, Jani, Jacques, De Keyzer, Frederik, Van Laere, Sigrid, Leus, Astrid, De Mey, Johan, Fourneau, Catherine, De Ridder, Filip, Van Cauteren, Toon, Willekens, Inneke, Cannie, Mieke, Jani, Jacques, De Keyzer, Frederik, Van Laere, Sigrid, Leus, Astrid, De Mey, Johan, Fourneau, Catherine, De Ridder, Filip, Van Cauteren, Toon, and Willekens, Inneke
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the changes in temperature within the gravid miniature pig uterus during magnetic resonance (MR) imaging at 3 T. Materials and Methods: The study received ethics committee approval for animal experimentation. Fiber-optic temperature sensors were inserted into the fetal brain, abdomen, bladder, and amniotic fluid of miniature pigs (second trimester, n = 2; third trimester, n = 2). In the first trimester (n = 2), the sensors were inserted only into the amniotic fluid (three sacs per miniature pig, for a total of six sacs). Imaging was performed with a 3-T MR imager by using different imaging protocols in a random order for animal, each lasting approximately 15 minutes. The first regimen consisted of common sequences used for human fetal MR examination, including normal specific absorption rate (SAR). The second regimen consisted of five low-SAR sequences, for which three gradient-echo sequences were interspersed with two diffusion-weighted imaging series. Finally, a high-SAR regimen maximized the radiofrequency energy deposition (constrained by the 2-W per kilogram of body weight SAR limitations) by using five single-shot turbo spin-echo sequences. Differences in temperature increases between the three regimens and between the three trimesters were evaluated by using one-way analysis of variance. The maximum cumulative temperature increase over 1 hour was also evaluated. Results: Low-SAR regimens resulted in the lowest temperature increase (mean ± standard deviation, 20.03°C ± 0.20), normal regimens resulted in an intermediate increase (0.31°C ± 0.21), and high-SAR regimens resulted in the highest increase (0.56°C ± 0.20) (P <.0001). Mean temperature increase in the third trimester was 0.38°C ± 0.27, with no significant differences compared with the first (0.23°C ± 0.27) and second (0.25°C ± 0.32) trimesters (P = .07). The cumulative temperature increase over 1-hour imaging time with high SAR can reach 2.5°C. Conclusion: In pregnant miniature pig, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2016
26. Biomarker Analysis in a Phase II Study of Sunitinib in Patients with Advanced Melanoma
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UCL - SSS/IREC/MIRO - Pôle d'imagerie moléculaire, radiothérapie et oncologie, UCL - (SLuc) Unité d'oncologie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Centre du cancer, Decoster, Lore, Vande Broek, Isabelle, Neyns, Bart, Majois, Françoise, Baurain, Jean-François, Rottey, Sylvie, Rorive, Andrée, Anckaert, Ellen, De Mey, Johan, De Brakeleer, Sylvia, De Grève, Jacques, UCL - SSS/IREC/MIRO - Pôle d'imagerie moléculaire, radiothérapie et oncologie, UCL - (SLuc) Unité d'oncologie médicale, UCL - (SLuc) Centre du cancer, Decoster, Lore, Vande Broek, Isabelle, Neyns, Bart, Majois, Françoise, Baurain, Jean-François, Rottey, Sylvie, Rorive, Andrée, Anckaert, Ellen, De Mey, Johan, De Brakeleer, Sylvia, and De Grève, Jacques
- Abstract
AIM: To investigate the efficacy of sunitinib in patients with advanced melanoma and to correlate angiogenic biomarkers with response and survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We performed a phase II study in patients with advanced pre-treated melanoma. The primary endpoint was tumor response. Blood samples for biomarker analysis including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and its receptors VEGFR1 and -2, placental growth factor (PlGF) and circulating endothelial cells (CEC) were collected at baseline and during the first cycle. RESULTS: Four out of 39 patients (13%) achieved a partial response and eight (26%) stable disease. Time to progression was at least six months in seven patients. High baseline VEGFR1 levels and high baseline PlGF levels were both associated with a non-significant worse survival (p=0.08 for both). CONCLUSION: Sunitinib demonstrates limited activity in unselected patients with refractory advanced melanoma, but a minority of patients experienced long-term disease control. Identification of these patients remains a challenge.
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- 2015
27. How to catch the patch? A dendrometer study of the radial increment through successive cambia in the mangrove Avicennia.
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Robert, Elisabeth Maria Rogier, Jambia, Abudhabi H, Schmitz, Nele, De Ryck, Dennis, De Mey, Johan, Kairo, James Gitundu, Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid, Beeckman, Hans, Koedam, Nico, Robert, Elisabeth Maria Rogier, Jambia, Abudhabi H, Schmitz, Nele, De Ryck, Dennis, De Mey, Johan, Kairo, James Gitundu, Dahdouh-Guebas, Farid, Beeckman, Hans, and Koedam, Nico
- Abstract
Background and AimsSuccessive vascular cambia are involved in the secondary growth of at least 200 woody species from >30 plant families. In the mangrove Avicennia these successive cambia are organized in patches, creating stems with non-concentric xylem tissue surrounded by internal phloem tissue. Little is known about radial growth and tree stem dynamics in trees with this type of anatomy. This study aims to (1) clarify the process of secondary growth of Avicennia trees by studying its patchiness; and (2) study the radial increment of Avicennia stems, both temporary and permanent, in relation to local climatic and environmental conditions. A test is made of the hypothesis that patchy radial growth and stem dynamics enable Avicennia trees to better survive conditions of extreme physiological drought.MethodsStem variations were monitored by automatic point dendrometers at four different positions around and along the stem of two Avicennia marina trees in the mangrove forest of Gazi Bay (Kenya) during 1 year.Key ResultsPatchiness was found in the radial growth and shrinkage and swelling patterns of Avicennia stems. It was, however, potentially rather than systematically present, i.e. stems reacted either concentrically or patchily to environment triggers, and it was fresh water availability and not tidal inundation that affected radial increment.ConclusionsIt is concluded that the ability to develop successive cambia in a patchy way enables Avicennia trees to adapt to changes in the prevailing environmental conditions, enhancing its survival in the highly dynamic mangrove environment. Limited water could be used in a more directive way, investing all the attainable resources in only some locations of the tree stem so that at least at these locations there is enough water to, for example, overcome vessel embolisms or create new cells. As these locations change with time, the overall functioning of the tree can be maintained., JOURNAL ARTICLE, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2014
28. Postmortem examination of human fetal hearts at or below 20 weeks' gestation: A comparison of high-field MRI at 9.4 T with lower-field MRI magnets and stereomicroscopic autopsy
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Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Verhoye, Marleen, Bessieres, Bettina, Fierens, Yves, Segers, Valérie, Vorsselmans, Anniek, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Verhoye, Marleen, Bessieres, Bettina, Fierens, Yves, Segers, Valérie, Vorsselmans, Anniek, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Cannie, Mieke
- Abstract
Objectives To compare the diagnostic usefulness of high-field with low-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and stereomicroscopic autopsy for examination of the heart in fetuses at or under 20 weeks' gestation. Methods Prior to invasive stereomicroscopic autopsy, MRI scans at 9.4, 3.0 and 1.5 T were performed on 24 fetuses between 11 and 20 weeks' gestation, including 10 fetuses with cardiac abnormalities. The ability to visualize different heart structures was evaluated according to the different field strength MRI magnets used and gestational age at examination. Results On 1.5- and 3.0-T MRI, only the heart situs and four-chamber view could be visualized consistently (in 75% or more of cases) when the fetus was beyond 16 weeks' gestation, but other heart structures could not be visualized for fetuses at any gestational age. In contrast, using high-field MRI at 9.4 T, the heart situs, four-chamber view and the outflow tracts could be visualized in all fetuses irrespective of gestational age. Using high-field MRI, the sensitivity for detecting an abnormality of the four-chamber view was 66.7% (95% CI, 30.1-92.1%) with a specificity of 80.0% (95% CI, 51.9-95.4%). For abnormalities of the outflow tracts, sensitivity was 75.0% (95% CI, 20.3-95.9%) and specificity 100.0% (95% CI, 83.3-100.0%). Eight fetuses out of 10 with congenital heart disease (CHD) were classified as having major CHD. High-field MRI at 9.4 T was able to identify seven out of the eight cases of major CHD. Conclusion High-field MRI at 9.4 T seems to be an acceptable alternative approach to invasive stereomicroscopic autopsy for fetuses with CHD at or below 20 weeks' gestation. Copyright © 2012 ISUOG. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
29. Magnetic resonance imaging in the normal fetal heart and in congenital heart disease
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Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Damry, Nasroolla, Dessy, Hugues, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Damry, Nasroolla, Dessy, Hugues, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Cannie, Mieke
- Abstract
Objective To evaluate prospectively the feasibility of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for assessment of the fetal heart for congenital heart disease (CHD). Methods This was a cross-sectional study, including 66 fetuses with a normal heart and 40 with CHD. The fetal heart was examined on MRI using axial steady-state free precession (SSFP) sequences. Regression analysis was used to investigate the effect on the ability to visualize cardiac anatomy of gestational age at examination, maternal body mass index, presence of fetal cardiac abnormality, fetal movements, fetal lie and twinning. The sensitivity and specificity of detecting cardiac defects were calculated. Results The four-chamber view was visualized in 98.1% of fetuses. The sensitivity of detecting a cardiac defect on the four-chamber view was 88% and the specificity 96%. The ability to visualize the left and right outflow tracts was only influenced by the presence of fetal movements: for the left outflow tract 94.4 vs. 50.0% visualization and for the right outflow tract 92.6 vs. 53.8% visualization without and with fetal movements, respectively. The sensitivity of detecting a cardiac defect of the left outflow tract was 63% and the specificity 100%, while sensitivity and specificity were 59 and 97%, respectively, for the right outflow tract. Conclusions Despite the use of SSFP sequences, MRI in the fetal heart remains of limited value. It can only be used as a second-line approach for abnormalities of the four-chamber view suspected at prenatal ultrasound. © 2012 ISUOG. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2012
30. Acceptance, reliability and confidence of diagnosis of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy compared with conventional autopsy: A prospective study
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Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Jani, Jacques
- Abstract
Objectives To compare prospectively maternal acceptance of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy with that of conventional autopsy and to determine the confidence with which magnetic resonance (MR) virtuopsy can be used to diagnose normality/abnormality of various fetal anatomical structures. Methods MR and/or computed tomography virtuopsy and conventional autopsy were offered to 96 women (102 fetuses/neonates) following termination of pregnancy (TOP), intrauterine fetal death (IUFD) or neonatal death. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to investigate the effect on maternal acceptance of virtuopsy and/or conventional autopsy of the age of the mother, gestational age at TOP or delivery after IUFD, order of pregnancy, parity, religion, type of caregiver obtaining consent and reason for death. When parents consented to both MR virtuopsy and conventional autopsy of fetuses ≥ 20 weeks of gestation or neonates, the confidence with which MR virtuopsy could be used to diagnose normality/abnormality of various anatomical structures was determined on a scale in which conventional autopsy was considered gold standard. On autopsy we classified fetuses/neonates as having either 'normal' or 'abnormal' anatomical structures; these groups were analyzed separately. At virtuopsy, we indicated confidence of diagnosis of normality/abnormality of every anatomical structure in each of these two groups defined at autopsy, using a scale from 0 (definitely abnormal) to 100 (definitely normal). Results Of the 96 women, 99% (n = 95) consented to virtuopsy and 61.5% (n = 59) to both conventional autopsy and virtuopsy; i.e. 36 (37.5%) consented to virtuopsy alone. Maternal acceptance of conventional autopsy was independently positively related to singleton pregnancy, non-Moslem mother, earlier gestation at TOP or delivery afer IUFD and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist obtaining consent. Thirty-three fetuses ≥ 20 weeks of gestation had both conventional autopsy and MR virtuopsy, of w, SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2012
31. Acceptance, reliability and confidence of diagnosis of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy compared with conventional autopsyA prospective study
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Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Jani, Jacques
- Abstract
SCOPUS: no.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
32. Acceptance, reliability and confidence of diagnosis of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy compared with conventional autopsyA prospective study
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Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Jani, Jacques
- Abstract
SCOPUS: no.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
33. Postmortem examination of human fetal hearts at or below 20 weeks' gestation: A comparison of high-field MRI at 9.4 T with lower-field MRI magnets and stereomicroscopic autopsy
- Author
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Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Verhoye, Marleen, Bessieres, Bettina, Fierens, Yves, Segers, Valérie, Vorsselmans, Anniek, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Verhoye, Marleen, Bessieres, Bettina, Fierens, Yves, Segers, Valérie, Vorsselmans, Anniek, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Cannie, Mieke
- Abstract
Objectives To compare the diagnostic usefulness of high-field with low-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and stereomicroscopic autopsy for examination of the heart in fetuses at or under 20 weeks' gestation. Methods Prior to invasive stereomicroscopic autopsy, MRI scans at 9.4, 3.0 and 1.5 T were performed on 24 fetuses between 11 and 20 weeks' gestation, including 10 fetuses with cardiac abnormalities. The ability to visualize different heart structures was evaluated according to the different field strength MRI magnets used and gestational age at examination. Results On 1.5- and 3.0-T MRI, only the heart situs and four-chamber view could be visualized consistently (in 75% or more of cases) when the fetus was beyond 16 weeks' gestation, but other heart structures could not be visualized for fetuses at any gestational age. In contrast, using high-field MRI at 9.4 T, the heart situs, four-chamber view and the outflow tracts could be visualized in all fetuses irrespective of gestational age. Using high-field MRI, the sensitivity for detecting an abnormality of the four-chamber view was 66.7% (95% CI, 30.1-92.1%) with a specificity of 80.0% (95% CI, 51.9-95.4%). For abnormalities of the outflow tracts, sensitivity was 75.0% (95% CI, 20.3-95.9%) and specificity 100.0% (95% CI, 83.3-100.0%). Eight fetuses out of 10 with congenital heart disease (CHD) were classified as having major CHD. High-field MRI at 9.4 T was able to identify seven out of the eight cases of major CHD. Conclusion High-field MRI at 9.4 T seems to be an acceptable alternative approach to invasive stereomicroscopic autopsy for fetuses with CHD at or below 20 weeks' gestation. Copyright © 2012 ISUOG. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
34. Magnetic resonance imaging in the normal fetal heart and in congenital heart disease
- Author
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Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Damry, Nasroolla, Dessy, Hugues, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Jani, Jacques, Damry, Nasroolla, Dessy, Hugues, Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Cannie, Mieke
- Abstract
Objective To evaluate prospectively the feasibility of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for assessment of the fetal heart for congenital heart disease (CHD). Methods This was a cross-sectional study, including 66 fetuses with a normal heart and 40 with CHD. The fetal heart was examined on MRI using axial steady-state free precession (SSFP) sequences. Regression analysis was used to investigate the effect on the ability to visualize cardiac anatomy of gestational age at examination, maternal body mass index, presence of fetal cardiac abnormality, fetal movements, fetal lie and twinning. The sensitivity and specificity of detecting cardiac defects were calculated. Results The four-chamber view was visualized in 98.1% of fetuses. The sensitivity of detecting a cardiac defect on the four-chamber view was 88% and the specificity 96%. The ability to visualize the left and right outflow tracts was only influenced by the presence of fetal movements: for the left outflow tract 94.4 vs. 50.0% visualization and for the right outflow tract 92.6 vs. 53.8% visualization without and with fetal movements, respectively. The sensitivity of detecting a cardiac defect of the left outflow tract was 63% and the specificity 100%, while sensitivity and specificity were 59 and 97%, respectively, for the right outflow tract. Conclusions Despite the use of SSFP sequences, MRI in the fetal heart remains of limited value. It can only be used as a second-line approach for abnormalities of the four-chamber view suspected at prenatal ultrasound. © 2012 ISUOG. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
35. Acceptance, reliability and confidence of diagnosis of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy compared with conventional autopsy: A prospective study
- Author
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Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, Jani, Jacques, Cannie, Mieke, Votino, Carmela, Moerman, Philippe, Vanheste, Ruben, Segers, Valérie, Van Berkel, Kim, Hanssens, Myriam C A J A M., Kang, Xin, Cos, Theresa, Kir, M., Balepa, Lisa, Divano, Luisa, Foulon, Walter, De Mey, Johan, and Jani, Jacques
- Abstract
Objectives To compare prospectively maternal acceptance of fetal and neonatal virtuopsy with that of conventional autopsy and to determine the confidence with which magnetic resonance (MR) virtuopsy can be used to diagnose normality/abnormality of various fetal anatomical structures. Methods MR and/or computed tomography virtuopsy and conventional autopsy were offered to 96 women (102 fetuses/neonates) following termination of pregnancy (TOP), intrauterine fetal death (IUFD) or neonatal death. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to investigate the effect on maternal acceptance of virtuopsy and/or conventional autopsy of the age of the mother, gestational age at TOP or delivery after IUFD, order of pregnancy, parity, religion, type of caregiver obtaining consent and reason for death. When parents consented to both MR virtuopsy and conventional autopsy of fetuses ≥ 20 weeks of gestation or neonates, the confidence with which MR virtuopsy could be used to diagnose normality/abnormality of various anatomical structures was determined on a scale in which conventional autopsy was considered gold standard. On autopsy we classified fetuses/neonates as having either 'normal' or 'abnormal' anatomical structures; these groups were analyzed separately. At virtuopsy, we indicated confidence of diagnosis of normality/abnormality of every anatomical structure in each of these two groups defined at autopsy, using a scale from 0 (definitely abnormal) to 100 (definitely normal). Results Of the 96 women, 99% (n = 95) consented to virtuopsy and 61.5% (n = 59) to both conventional autopsy and virtuopsy; i.e. 36 (37.5%) consented to virtuopsy alone. Maternal acceptance of conventional autopsy was independently positively related to singleton pregnancy, non-Moslem mother, earlier gestation at TOP or delivery afer IUFD and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist obtaining consent. Thirty-three fetuses ≥ 20 weeks of gestation had both conventional autopsy and MR virtuopsy, of w, SCOPUS: ar.j, FLWIN, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2012
36. THE EFFECT OF ONE LEFT-SIDED DORSOLATERAL PREFRONTAL CORTICAL HF-rTMS SESSION ON EMOTIONAL BRAIN PROCESSES IN WOMEN
- Author
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Baeken, Chris, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, De Raedt, Rudi, De Mey, Johan, Vanderhasselt, Marie-Anne, Bossuyt, Axel, Luypaert, Robert, Baeken, Chris, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, De Raedt, Rudi, De Mey, Johan, Vanderhasselt, Marie-Anne, Bossuyt, Axel, and Luypaert, Robert
- Abstract
Although repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) is frequently used to examine emotional changes in healthy volunteers, it remains largely unknown how rTMS is able to influence emotion.We carried out a sham-controlled single-blind crossover study using fMRI, we examined in 20 right-handed healthy female volunteers whether a single high frequency (HF)-rTMS session applied to the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) could influence emotional processing while focussing on blocks of positively and negatively valenced baby faces. A single HF-rTMS session selectively influenced the processing of positively and negatively valenced baby faces. In essence, our results indicate that the effects of one left-sided HF-rTMS sessions results in improved processing of positive emotions and reduced negative emotional processing in never depressed female subjects
- Published
- 2010
37. Histological findings compared with magnetic resonance and ultrasonographic imaging in irreversible postmastectomy lymphedema: A case study
- Author
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Tassenoy, An, De Mey, Johan, Stadnik, Tadeusz T.W., De Ridder, Filip, Peeters, Els, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Wylock, Paul, Van Eeckhout, Gregory P A, Verdonck, Kristoff, Lamote, Jan, Baeyens, Luc, Lievens, Pierre, Tassenoy, An, De Mey, Johan, Stadnik, Tadeusz T.W., De Ridder, Filip, Peeters, Els, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Wylock, Paul, Van Eeckhout, Gregory P A, Verdonck, Kristoff, Lamote, Jan, Baeyens, Luc, and Lievens, Pierre
- Abstract
Postmastectomy edema is a current complication after axillary lymph node dissection in cases of breast cancer treatment. Staging is important in order to select those patients who can benefit from complex physical therapy (CPT). Different imaging techniques can be used to evaluate the edema. Ultrasonography (US) is a harmless, cheap, and easily applicable technique to visualize the dermal and subcutaneous tissue, but interpretation of the obtained images is not always evident. The aim of this study was to compare ultrasound images of irreversible edema with tissue histology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Ultrasonographic images of the edematous dermis show an homogeneous hypoechogenic dermal layer that appears on tissue histology to be less compact, due to the excess of fluid in the interstitium separating the collagen fibres and making it more transparent on light microscopy. MRI of the dermis gives a hyperintense signal, indicating the presence of fluid. In the subcutis, increase of the adipose tissue could be observed on US, MRI, and tissue histology. In the case of lymphedema, the area and perimeter of fat cells is significantly (p < 0.05) increased. Hypoechogenic areas near the muscle fascia are registrated on US corresponding with epifascial fluid on MRI, and hyperechogenic branches are embedded within the adipose tissue, on tissue histology seen as large fibrotic septa enclosing adipose cells. MRI has a honeycomb picture corresponding with fluid bound to fibrosis. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2009
38. Histological findings compared with magnetic resonance and ultrasonographic imaging in irreversible postmastectomy lymphedema: A case study
- Author
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Tassenoy, An, De Mey, Johan, Stadnik, Tadeusz T.W., De Ridder, Filip, Peeters, Els, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Wylock, Paul, Van Eeckhout, Gregory P A, Verdonck, Kristoff, Lamote, Jan, Baeyens, Luc, Lievens, Pierre, Tassenoy, An, De Mey, Johan, Stadnik, Tadeusz T.W., De Ridder, Filip, Peeters, Els, Van Schuerbeek, Peter, Wylock, Paul, Van Eeckhout, Gregory P A, Verdonck, Kristoff, Lamote, Jan, Baeyens, Luc, and Lievens, Pierre
- Abstract
Postmastectomy edema is a current complication after axillary lymph node dissection in cases of breast cancer treatment. Staging is important in order to select those patients who can benefit from complex physical therapy (CPT). Different imaging techniques can be used to evaluate the edema. Ultrasonography (US) is a harmless, cheap, and easily applicable technique to visualize the dermal and subcutaneous tissue, but interpretation of the obtained images is not always evident. The aim of this study was to compare ultrasound images of irreversible edema with tissue histology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Ultrasonographic images of the edematous dermis show an homogeneous hypoechogenic dermal layer that appears on tissue histology to be less compact, due to the excess of fluid in the interstitium separating the collagen fibres and making it more transparent on light microscopy. MRI of the dermis gives a hyperintense signal, indicating the presence of fluid. In the subcutis, increase of the adipose tissue could be observed on US, MRI, and tissue histology. In the case of lymphedema, the area and perimeter of fat cells is significantly (p < 0.05) increased. Hypoechogenic areas near the muscle fascia are registrated on US corresponding with epifascial fluid on MRI, and hyperechogenic branches are embedded within the adipose tissue, on tissue histology seen as large fibrotic septa enclosing adipose cells. MRI has a honeycomb picture corresponding with fluid bound to fibrosis. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2009
39. Gastrointestinal amyloidosis presenting as enterocolitis on abdominal CT scan
- Author
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Willekens, Inneke, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Sennesael, Jacques, de Mey, Johan, Willekens, Inneke, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Sennesael, Jacques, and de Mey, Johan
- Abstract
The imaging findings of amyloidosis are nonspecific and diverse due to its association with various chronic diseases such as multiple myeloma. We report a case of gastrointestinal amyloidosis presenting as enterocolitis on a contrast enhanced CT scan of the abdomen.
- Published
- 2009
40. Cetuximab with hepatic arterial infusion of chemotherapy for the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases
- Author
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Neyns, Bart, Aerts, Maridi, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Fontaine, Christel, De Coster, Lore, Schallier, Denis, Vanderauwera, Jacques, De Munck, Floris, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Everaert, Hendrik, Meert, Vanessa, De Mey, Johan, De Ridder, Mark, Delvaux, Georges, De Greve, Jacques, Neyns, Bart, Aerts, Maridi, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Fontaine, Christel, De Coster, Lore, Schallier, Denis, Vanderauwera, Jacques, De Munck, Floris, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Everaert, Hendrik, Meert, Vanessa, De Mey, Johan, De Ridder, Mark, Delvaux, Georges, and De Greve, Jacques
- Abstract
Background: Both hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) of chemotherapy and cetuximab (CET) have interesting activity for the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases (CRC-LM). Patients and Methods: Intravenous CET with HAI oxaliplatin (OXA) or i.v. Irinotecan (IRI) followed by HAI of infusion of folic acid modulated 5-fluorouracil 5-FU/l-FA was administered to patients (pts) with CRC-LM who had failed at least one line of prior chemotherapy. Results: Eight pts received i.v. CET with HAI-OXA (5 pts) and i.v.-IRI (3 pts) and HAI-S-FU/I-FA. Adverse events: repeated grade 3 skin toxicity (1 pt), abdominal pain with elevated liver enzymes and asthenia (2 pts), duodenal ulcer (2 pts) with catheter migration and intestinal bleeding (1 pt), reversible interstitial pneumonitis (1 pt), and cystic bile duct dilatation (2 pts) with arteriobiliary fistulisation (1 pt). A partial response was documented in 5 pts (62%). The median time to progression was 8.7 months (95% confidence interval 8-14 months). Conclusion: Intravenous administration of CET with HAI of chemotherapy is feasible and has promising activity but is associated with specific toxicity., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2008
41. Cetuximab with hepatic arterial infusion of chemotherapy for the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases
- Author
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Neyns, Bart, Aerts, Maridi, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Fontaine, Christel, De Coster, Lore, Schallier, Denis, Vanderauwera, Jacques, De Munck, Floris, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Everaert, Hendrik, Meert, Vanessa, De Mey, Johan, De Ridder, Mark, Delvaux, Georges, De Greve, Jacques, Neyns, Bart, Aerts, Maridi, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Fontaine, Christel, De Coster, Lore, Schallier, Denis, Vanderauwera, Jacques, De Munck, Floris, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Everaert, Hendrik, Meert, Vanessa, De Mey, Johan, De Ridder, Mark, Delvaux, Georges, and De Greve, Jacques
- Abstract
Background: Both hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) of chemotherapy and cetuximab (CET) have interesting activity for the treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases (CRC-LM). Patients and Methods: Intravenous CET with HAI oxaliplatin (OXA) or i.v. Irinotecan (IRI) followed by HAI of infusion of folic acid modulated 5-fluorouracil 5-FU/l-FA was administered to patients (pts) with CRC-LM who had failed at least one line of prior chemotherapy. Results: Eight pts received i.v. CET with HAI-OXA (5 pts) and i.v.-IRI (3 pts) and HAI-S-FU/I-FA. Adverse events: repeated grade 3 skin toxicity (1 pt), abdominal pain with elevated liver enzymes and asthenia (2 pts), duodenal ulcer (2 pts) with catheter migration and intestinal bleeding (1 pt), reversible interstitial pneumonitis (1 pt), and cystic bile duct dilatation (2 pts) with arteriobiliary fistulisation (1 pt). A partial response was documented in 5 pts (62%). The median time to progression was 8.7 months (95% confidence interval 8-14 months). Conclusion: Intravenous administration of CET with HAI of chemotherapy is feasible and has promising activity but is associated with specific toxicity., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2008
42. Ileocolic invagination as a complication of a cecal adenocarcinoma
- Author
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Willekens, Inneke, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Hoorens, Anne, de Mey, Johan, Willekens, Inneke, Vandenbroucke, Frederik, Van Nieuwenhove, Yves, Hoorens, Anne, and de Mey, Johan
- Abstract
Ileocolic invagination in the adult may be caused by adenocarcinoma and lead to intestinal obstruction. We report a case of a cecal adenocarcinoma that was complicated by an ileocolic invagination in a 38 year old female, diagnosed on a contrast enhanced CT scan of the abdomen and highlights the importance of contrast enhanced CT for diagnosis of ileocolic invagination.
- Published
- 2008
43. Aortoesophageal fistula following endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm
- Author
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Martens, Koen, Van den Brande, Pierre, De Mey, Johan, Everaert, Hendrik, Delvaux, Georges, Martens, Koen, Van den Brande, Pierre, De Mey, Johan, Everaert, Hendrik, and Delvaux, Georges
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to report a case of aortoesophageal fistula following endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm, treated conservatively with fatal outcome. Endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm was performed in a 64-year-old female patient. Three months later the diagnosis of an aortoesophageal fistula was made and minimal surgery (cervicotomy and jejunostomy) was performed, combined with antibiotherapy and catheter flushing of the infected excluded aneurysm thrombus. The patient died in septic shock 9 weeks later. As reported, following conventional thoracic aortic aneurysm surgery, endovascular stenting of the thoracic aorta can be complicated by aortoesophageal fistula. Management should be surgical, since the outcome under conservative management seems invariably fatal. However, it looks as if the poor condition of these patients may not permit open surgical treatment., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2007
44. Aortoesophageal fistula following endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm
- Author
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Martens, Koen, Van den Brande, Pierre, De Mey, Johan, Everaert, Hendrik, Delvaux, Georges, Martens, Koen, Van den Brande, Pierre, De Mey, Johan, Everaert, Hendrik, and Delvaux, Georges
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to report a case of aortoesophageal fistula following endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm, treated conservatively with fatal outcome. Endovascular exclusion of a thoracic aneurysm was performed in a 64-year-old female patient. Three months later the diagnosis of an aortoesophageal fistula was made and minimal surgery (cervicotomy and jejunostomy) was performed, combined with antibiotherapy and catheter flushing of the infected excluded aneurysm thrombus. The patient died in septic shock 9 weeks later. As reported, following conventional thoracic aortic aneurysm surgery, endovascular stenting of the thoracic aorta can be complicated by aortoesophageal fistula. Management should be surgical, since the outcome under conservative management seems invariably fatal. However, it looks as if the poor condition of these patients may not permit open surgical treatment., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2007
45. FDG accumulation in inguinal herniation mimicking metastatic disease
- Author
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Muylle, Kristoff, Everaert, Hendrik, De Mey, Johan, Lahoutte, Tony, Franken, Philippe, Bossuyt, Audrey, Muylle, Kristoff, Everaert, Hendrik, De Mey, Johan, Lahoutte, Tony, Franken, Philippe, and Bossuyt, Audrey
- Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) using fluorodeoxy-glucose (FDG) plays an important role in the management of oncologic diseases. Interpretation of the FDG-PET data requires a profound knowledge of the normal variety of FDG biodistribution and of the different pitfalls that may mimic additional localizations of disease. The authors report a unique case of focal increased FDG activity resulting from intestinal uptake in an inguinal herniation., SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2004
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