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Accelerated Stack-of-Spirals Free-Breathing Three-Dimensional Ultrashort Echo Time Lung Magnetic Resonance Imaging: A Feasibility Study in Patients With Breast Canceropen access

Authors
Cha, M.J.Ahn, H.S.Choi, H.Park, H.J.Benkert, T.Pfeuffer, J.Paek, M.Y.
Issue Date
Oct-2021
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
Keywords
acceleration; lung; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; metastasis; ultrashort echo time
Citation
Frontiers in Oncology, v.11
Journal Title
Frontiers in Oncology
Volume
11
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/51508
DOI
10.3389/fonc.2021.746059
ISSN
2234-943X
Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the clinical feasibility of accelerated free-breathing stack-of-spirals (spiral) three-dimensional (3D) ultrashort echo time (UTE) lung magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using iterative self‐consistent parallel imaging reconstruction from arbitrary k‐space (SPIRiT) algorithm in patients with breast cancer. Methods: The institutional review board approved this prospective study and patients’ informed consents were obtained. Between June and August 2018, 29 female patients with breast cancer underwent 3-T MRI including accelerated free-breathing spiral 3D UTE (0.98-mm isotropic spatial resolution; echo time, 0.05 msec) of the lungs and thin-section chest computed tomography (CT). Two radiologists evaluated the image quality and pulmonary nodules on MRI were assessed and compared, CT as a reference. Results: The pulmonary vessels and bronchi were visible consistently up to the sub-sub-segmental and sub-segmental branch levels, respectively, on accelerated spiral 3D UTE. The overall image quality was evaluated as good and excellent for 70.7% of accelerated spiral 3D UTE images (reviewer [R]1, 72.4% [21/29]; R2, 69.0% [20/29]) and acceptable for 20.7% (both R1 and R2, 20.7% [6/29]). Five patients on CT revealed 141 pulmonary metastatic nodules (5.3 ± 2.6 mm); the overall nodule detection rate of accelerated spiral 3D UTE was sensitivity of 90.8% (128/141), accuracy of 87.7%, and positive predictive value of 96.2%. In the Bland-Altman plot analysis comparing nodule size between CT and MRI, 132/141 nodules (93.6%) were inside the limits of agreement. Conclusion: Accelerated free-breathing spiral 3D UTE using the SPIRiT algorithm could be a potential alternative to CT for oncology patients. © Copyright © 2021 Cha, Ahn, Choi, Park, Benkert, Pfeuffer and Paek.
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