Clinical feasibility of brain quantitative susceptibility mapping. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: To evaluate the quality of brain quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) that is fully automatically reconstructed in clinical MRI of various neurological diseases. METHODS: 393 consecutive patients in one month were recruited for this evaluation study. QSM was reconstructed using Morphology Enabled Dipole Inversion without zero reference regularization (MEDI) and using MEDI with cerebrospinal fluid automatic zero-reference regularization to generate susceptibility values (MEDI+0). Two neuroradiologists independently assessed the image quality of MEDI+0 and MEDI and image concordance between them. Lesion susceptibility values were measured in 20 cases of glioma, 21 cases of ischemic stroke and 43 multiple sclerosis (MS) cases on both MEDI+0 and MEDI images. RESULTS: The two neuroradiologists rated the MEDI+0 image qualities of the 393 cases as 351 (89.3%) and 362 (92.1%) excellent, 29 (7.4%) and 24 (6.1%) diagnostic, and 13 (3.3%) and 7 (1.8%) poor, and scored the concordances between MEDI+0 and MEDI as 364 (92.6%) and 351 (89.3%) excellent, 13 (3.3%) and 31 (7.9%) good, 14 (3.6%) and 9 (2.3%) intermediate, 2 (0.5%) and 2 (0.5%) poor, and 0 (0%) and 0 (0%) none. There was good correlation between MEDI+0 and MEDI in lesion susceptibility contrast of glioma, ischemic stroke, and MS cases (all p < 0.05). The MS lesion susceptibility time course from this patient cohort was found to be similar to the reported pattern: isointense initially for acute enhancing lesions, and hyperintense over the following years for active chronic lesions. CONCLUSION: Brain QSM images of various neurological diseases have reliable diagnostic quality in clinical MRI, with MEDI+0 providing susceptibility values automatically referenced to CSF in longitudinal and cross-center studies.

publication date

  • April 4, 2019

Research

keywords

  • Brain
  • Brain Ischemia
  • Glioma
  • Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Multiple Sclerosis
  • Nervous System Diseases
  • Stroke

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC6535129

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85063941326

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.mri.2019.04.003

PubMed ID

  • 30954651

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 60