Objective: To investigate the utility of diffusion-weighted (DW) MRI using high b-value vs standard b-value for patients with medulloblastoma (MB). Minimum apparent diffusion coefficient (ADCMIN) values were also compared with tumour cellularity.
Methods: High and standard b-value DW images were obtained for 17 patients with MB. The number and location of the lesions, signal intensities (SIs), signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), contrast-to-noise ratios, contrast ratios (CRs) and ADCs of the lesions were compared. Tumour cellularity was also measured and compared with ADCMIN values.
Results: All 20 lesions were hyperintense on the DW MR images with high and standard b-values. Four additional lesions were revealed on high b-value, and all 24 lesions were more conspicuous at high b-value. SI, SNR and ADC values for the lesions were lower in the high b-value images than in the standard b-value images. The ADCMIN value at b = 3000 s mm(-2) was more significantly associated with tumour cellularity than that at b = 1000 s mm(-2). CR values were significantly higher in the high b-value images than in the standard b-value images.
Conclusion: DW imaging using high b-value may be beneficial for detecting additional, less prominent lesions and may improve the contrast between MB lesions and normal tissue. A stronger inverse correlation with tumour cellularity was identified using the ADCMIN values at high b-value.
Advances in knowledge: This study demonstrates the superiority of high b-value DW imaging compared with standard b-value imaging for the detection of MB lesions, especially those with subtle foci.