Interstitial fluid transport dynamics predict glioblastoma invasion and progression

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Abstract

Glioblastoma is characterized by aggressive infiltration into surrounding brain tissue, hindering complete surgical resection and contributing to poor patient outcomes. Identifying tumor-specific invasion patterns is essential for advancing our understanding of glioblastoma progression and improving surgical and radiotherapeutic strategies. Here, we leverage in vivo dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) to noninvasively quantify interstitial fluid velocity, direction, and diffusion within and around glioblastomas. We introduce a novel vector-based pathline analysis to trace downstream accumulation of fluid flow originating from the tumor core, providing a spatially explicit perspective on local flow patterns. We find that localized fluid transport metrics predict glioblastoma invasion and progression, offering a new framework to non-invasively identify high-risk regions and guide targeted treatment approaches.

One sentence summary

Invasion and progression of glioblastoma can be predicted with interstitial fluid flow patterns via magnetic resonance imaging.

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