Contrast-enhanced ultrasound in brain tumor surgery: clinical applications, intraoperative utility, and safety — A systematic review - 27/06/26
, Márcio Yuri Ferreira b, Benjamin Marc Daniels c, Gabriel Zeferino Cardoso Mendonça a, Danil Ratnikov d, Filipe Belchior Bessa Zanovello a, André Luis Pereira a, Ali Haidous e, Madison McDonald c, Júlia Campos Polloto a, Paulo Vitor Marques Xavier a, Baltazar Leão Reis a, Netanel Ben-Shalom bHighlights |
• | Studies reported CEUS as useful for tumor delineation, grading, and resection control. |
• | Hyperenhancement in HGGs correlates with microvascular density and histopathology. |
• | CEUS aids in distinguishing tumor recurrence from radionecrosis intraoperatively. |
• | No serious UCA-related adverse events were reported across all studies. |
Abstract |
Background |
Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) has been increasingly used as an intraoperative adjunct in neuro-oncology. Although multiple studies have reported favorable imaging performance across different brain tumor types and surgical applications, the breadth of its clinical utility, imaging patterns, and safety profile remains incompletely characterized due to fragmented and heterogeneous evidence. This systematic review aimed to comprehensively evaluate the clinical applications, imaging findings, and safety of CEUS in patients with intracranial tumors.
Methods |
A PRISMA-compliant systematic review was conducted using PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science. Clinical studies evaluating CEUS in patients with intra- or extra-axial brain tumors and reporting imaging-related outcomes were included. Data on study design, ultrasound protocols, CEUS applications, imaging characteristics, and adverse events were qualitatively synthesized.
Results |
Thirty-three studies involving 1,083 patients were included. CEUS was applied intraoperatively in all studies, most commonly for differentiation between tumoral and normal brain tissue, between tumor types, and between tumor recurrence and radionecrosis, resection control, intratumoral vasculature assessment, biopsy guidance, and follow-up modality. CEUS consistently improved visualization of lesion boundaries and residual tumor, with characteristic perfusion patterns correlating with histopathology and microvascular density. Reported contrast-related adverse events were rare and non-serious.
Conclusion |
Findings indicate CEUS to be a safe and valuable intraoperative imaging adjunct in neuro-oncology, providing real-time functional and vascular information that may improve tumor characterization and surgical guidance. This systematic review offers the first comprehensive synthesis of the clinical evidence on CEUS in neuro-oncologic surgery, outlining its current applications, strengths, and limitations within an otherwise heterogeneous literature.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Neuro-oncology, Contrast-enhanced ultrasound, Tumors, Neuro-imaging
Plan
Vol 72 - N° 4
Article 101842- juillet 2026 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?
