- Shiroishi, Mark S;
- Weinert, Dane;
- Cen, Steven Y;
- Varghese, Bino;
- Dondlinger, Timothy;
- Prah, Melissa;
- Mendoza, Jesse;
- Nazemi, Sina;
- Ameli, Nima;
- Amini, Negin;
- Shohas, Salman;
- Chen, Shannon;
- Bigjahan, Bavrina;
- Zada, Gabriel;
- Chen, Thomas;
- Neman-Ebrahim, Josh;
- Chang, Eric L;
- Chow, Frances E;
- Fan, Zhaoyang;
- Yang, Wensha;
- Attenello, Frank J;
- Ye, Jason;
- Kim, Paul E;
- Patel, Vishal N;
- Lerner, Alexander;
- Acharya, Jay;
- Hu, Leland S;
- Quarles, C Chad;
- Boxerman, Jerrold L;
- Wu, Ona;
- Schmainda, Kathleen M
Introduction
1.5 Tesla (1.5T) remain a significant field strength for brain imaging worldwide. Recent computer simulations and clinical studies at 3T MRI have suggested that dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) MRI using a 30° flip angle ("low-FA") with model-based leakage correction and no gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA) preload provides equivalent relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) measurements to the reference-standard acquisition using a single-dose GBCA preload with a 60° flip angle ("intermediate-FA") and model-based leakage correction. However, it remains unclear whether this holds true at 1.5T. The purpose of this study was to test this at 1.5T in human high-grade glioma (HGG) patients.Methods
This was a single-institution cross-sectional study of patients who had undergone 1.5T MRI for HGG. DSC-MRI consisted of gradient-echo echo-planar imaging (GRE-EPI) with a low-FA without preload (30°/P-); this then subsequently served as a preload for the standard intermediate-FA acquisition (60°/P+). Both normalized (nrCBV) and standardized relative cerebral blood volumes (srCBV) were calculated using model-based leakage correction (C+) with IBNeuro™ software. Whole-enhancing lesion mean and median nrCBV and srCBV from the low- and intermediate-FA methods were compared using the Pearson's, Spearman's and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC).Results
Twenty-three HGG patients composing a total of 31 scans were analyzed. The Pearson and Spearman correlations and ICCs between the 30°/P-/C+ and 60°/P+/C+ acquisitions demonstrated high correlations for both mean and median nrCBV and srCBV.Conclusion
Our study provides preliminary evidence that for HGG patients at 1.5T MRI, a low FA, no preload DSC-MRI acquisition can be an appealing alternative to the reference standard higher FA acquisition that utilizes a preload.