Objective: To investigate a correlation between preoperative data from proton-MR-spectroscopy (1HMRS), genomic alterations (epidermal growth growth factor receptor [EGFR] gene amplification) and histomorphometric data from glioblastomas.
Study design: In surgical specimens from 18 patients with glioblastomas, the degree of amplification of the gene for EGFR was determined in the region with the largest Ki-67 proliferation index by differential polymerase chain reaction.
Results: Correlation analysis showed significant positive correlation between degree of EGFR gene amplification and choline and total creatine (CHO/TCR) ratio, indicating increased membrane turnover. Cases with a high EGFR/interferon ratio showed a tendency toward a low lipid peak, whereas cases with a low EGFR/interferon ratio showed a large variation of the lipid peak. Differences were observed regarding quantitative histomorphologic data of tumor cell nuclei, especially nuclear size and shape. Together with the EGFR/interferon ratio, these morphometric data provided a good reclassification of cases with low and with high values for both spectroscopic variables by means of cross-validated linear discriminant analysis.
Conclusion: The results provide further evidence for the biologic significance of metabolic data from preoperative 1HMRS, because these metabolic data showed a significant statistical relationship with histomorphology and a frequently occurring molecular biologic alteration (EGFR gene amplification) in glioblastomas.