Abstract
To evaluate the performance of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) for differentiating orbital malignant from benign tumors, and to assess the correlation between IVIM-DWI parameters and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) parameters.Twenty-seven patients (17 benign and 10 malignant) with orbital tumors underwent 3.0T MRI examination for pre-treatment evaluation, including IVIM-DWI and DCE-MRI. IVIM-DWI parameters (tissue diffusivity, D; pseudo-diffusion coefficient, D; and perfusion fraction, f) were quantified using bi-exponential fitting model. DCE-MRI parameters (K, the volume transfer constant between the plasma and the extracellular extravascular space [EES]; Ve, the volume fraction of the EES, and Kep, the rate constant from EES to blood plasma) were quantified using modified Tofts model. Independent-sample t test, receiver operating characteristic curve analyses and Spearman correlation test were used for statistical analyses.Malignant orbital tumors showed lower D (P <.001) and higher D (P = .002) than benign tumors. Setting a D value of 0.966 × 10 mm/s as the cut-off value, a diagnostic performance (AUC, 0.888; sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 82.35%) could be obtained for diagnosing malignant tumors. While setting a D value of 42.371 × 10 mm/s as cut-off value, a diagnostic performance could be achieved (AUC, 0.847; sensitivity, 90.00%; specificity, 70.59%). Poor or moderated correlations were found between IVIM-DWI and DCE-MRI parameters (D and Kep, r = 0.427, P = .027; D and Ve, r = 0.626, P <.001).IVIM-DWI is potentially useful for differentiating orbital malignant from benign tumors. Poor or moderate correlations exist between IVIM-DWI and DCE-MRI parameters. IVIM-DWI may be a useful adjunctive perfusion technique for the differential diagnosis of orbital tumors.