| Literature DB >> 22322308 |
Jelle O Barentsz1, Jonathan Richenberg, Richard Clements, Peter Choyke, Sadhna Verma, Geert Villeirs, Olivier Rouviere, Vibeke Logager, Jurgen J Fütterer.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: The aim was to develop clinical guidelines for multi-parametric MRI of the prostate by a group of prostate MRI experts from the European Society of Urogenital Radiology (ESUR), based on literature evidence and consensus expert opinion. True evidence-based guidelines could not be formulated, but a compromise, reflected by "minimal" and "optimal" requirements has been made. The scope of these ESUR guidelines is to promulgate high quality MRI in acquisition and evaluation with the correct indications for prostate cancer across the whole of Europe and eventually outside Europe. The guidelines for the optimal technique and three protocols for "detection", "staging" and "node and bone" are presented. The use of endorectal coil vs. pelvic phased array coil and 1.5 vs. 3 T is discussed. Clinical indications and a PI-RADS classification for structured reporting are presented. KEY POINTS: This report provides guidelines for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in prostate cancer. Clinical indications, and minimal and optimal imaging acquisition protocols are provided. A structured reporting system (PI-RADS) is described.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22322308 PMCID: PMC3297750 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-011-2377-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Treatment options: role of MRI
| Life expectancy | Active surveillance | Radical surgery | Radiotherapy | Hormones | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Localised | 10–15 year estimated life expectancy (Generally these patients will be younger than 75) | Yes | Yes—consider nerve sparing | External or brachytherapy | No |
| Localised | Less than 10–15 years | Yes | Rarely | External or brachytherapy | No |
| Locally advanced | Any | No | No | In combination with hormones | Yes |
| Metastatic | Any | No | No | Palliative | Yes |
Acquisition protocols: minimum requirements
| A. Detection protocol |
| Fast <30-min protocol without an endorectal coil (ERC). Images should cover entire prostate, and include T2WI, DWI and DCE-MRI. Imaging can adequately be performed at 1.5 T using a good 8- to 16-channel pelvic phased array (PPA). Anti-peristaltic drugs (Buscopan®, Glucagon®) should be given. |
| • T2WI axial+sagittal: 4 mm at 1.5 T, 3 mm at 3 T; in plane resolution: 0.5 × 0.5 mm to 0.7 × 0.7 mm at both 1.5 T and 3 T. |
| • DWI axial: 5 mm at 1.5 T, 4 mm at 3 T; in-plane resolution: 1.5 × 1.5 mm to 2.0 × 2.0 mm at 1.5 T and 1.0 × 1.0 mm to 1.5 × 1.5 mm at 3 T. ADC map should be calculated. At least 3 b-values should be acquired in three orthogonal directions and adapted to quality of SNR: 0, 100 and 800–1000 s/mm2. For calculation of ADC, the highest b-value that should be used is 1000 s/mm2. |
| • DCE-MRI axial: 4 mm at 1.5 T and 3 T; in plane resolution: 1.0 × 1.0 mm at 1.5 T and 0.7 × 0.7 mm at 3 T. Quantitative or semi-quantitative DCE-MRI analysis does not have to be performed. Maximum temporal resolution should be 15 s following single dose of contrast agent with an injection rate of 3 mL/s. For DCE-MRI, imaging acquisition should be continued for 5 min to detect washout. Unenhanced T1WI images from this sequence can be used to detect post-biopsy haematomas. |
| • MRSI: optionally, MRSI can be added to the detection protocol, but this requires an extra 10–15 min of examination time. For this ERC is mandatory at 1.5 T and optional at 3 T; volume of interest (VOI) aligned to axial T2WI; coverage of the whole prostate in the VOI; field of view at least 1.5 voxels larger than the VOI in all directions to avoid wrap-around or back folding; matrix of at least 8 x 8 x 8 phase-encoding steps with nominal voxel size <0.5 cc; spectral selective suppression of water and lipid signals; positioning of at least six fat saturation bands close to the prostatic margin (may be positioned inside the VOI) to conform to the prostatic shape as closely as possible; automatic or manual shimming up to a line width at half height of the water resonance peak between 15 and 20 Hz at 1.5 T and between 20 and 25 Hz at 3 T. |
| B. Staging protocol |
| 45-min protocol for evaluating minimal extra-capsular extension. Preferably, this examination should be done with an ERC. Images should include entire prostate, with anti-peristaltic drugs. |
| • T2WI axial, coronal and sagittal planes, 3 mm at 1.5 T and 3 T; in plane resolution: 0.3 × 0.3 mm to 0.7 × 0.7 mm at 1.5 T and 0.3 × 0.3 mm to 0.5 × 0.5 mm at 3 T. |
| • DWI and DCE as detection protocol. |
| • MRSI optional. |
| C. Nodes and bone protocol |
| 30-min protocol, to assess nodal size and bone marrow metastases. Should be performed separately from A and B, as most patients do not require bone or node staging. |
| • T1WI coronal of lower lumbar spine plus pelvis (SE or f/T SE) 3.0-mm slices |
| • 3D f/T SE T2WI coronal of lower lumbar spine plus pelvis; 1.0-mm isometric voxels |
| • DWI coronal of lower lumbar spine plus pelvis (b-values 0 and 600); slice thickness 3–4 mm, in plane resolution: 2.5–3.0 mm voxels |
| • T1WI sagittal cervical and thoracic spine (SE or f/T SE) |
| • STIR or DWI sagittal cervical and thoracic spine. |
Fig. 1Algorithm in imaging men referred with elevated serum prostate specific antigen (PSA), abnormal digital rectal examination (DRE), or family history of prostate cancer
Fig. 2A 65-year-old man with stage T3a Gleason 4+3 prostate cancer at the left peripheral zone (PZ). a On the axial T2WI at mid-prostate level in the left PZ there is a low signal lesion (outlined) with obliteration of the recto-prostatic angle and extra-capsular extension (arrow). b Magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) of the normal right side shows low choline+creatine, whereas on (c) MRSI of the tumour shows high choline+creatine. The choline peak of tumour is as equally as high as the citrate peak. This results in a PI-RADS score for MRSI of 3
Fig. 3A 75-year-old man. After five negative trans-rectal ultrasound (TRUS) biopsies PSA rose to 32 ng/mL, PCa3 = 62. Multi-parametric (Mp)-MRI was performed. a On axial T2WI there is a lenticular area with homogeneous low signal intensity (SI) and unsharp borders: “erased charcoal sign” (outlined), in the mid-prostate level in ventral transition zone (TZ) which is located anterior to the “organised chaos” of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). This pathological area originates from anterior fibromuscular stroma, and thus has a PI-RADS T2WI score of 5. b On the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map this region has a minimum ADC value of 650 (dark area); c On the b = 1400 image this area is white. This results in a PI-RADS score for diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) of 5. d This region shows a curve type 3 (wash-out), and on (e) T2WI with ktrans overlay, there is asymmetric, rather focal enhancement. This gives a PI-RADS score for dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI of 3 + 2 = 5. f shows the anterior location of the tumour on sagittal T2WI. As MRSI was not performed the sum PI-RADS score is 15/15, which argues in favour of an aggressive (significant) tumour. Thus the overall PI-RADS score for probability of being a significant cancer is 5. MR-guided biopsy revealed a Gleason 4 + 5 = 9 tumour. As the images clearly indicate a tumour, one may argue that one of the parameters may be obviated. However, mp-MRI is not only meant to “detect” a tumour, but also to predict its aggression. If all parameters point into the same direction, the chance of a clinically “significant” tumour (that is Gleason 4+3 or higher) is extremely high. If there is discordance it may be prostatitis or an insignificant (Gleason 3+3) cancer
Scoring of extra-prostatic disease
| Criteria | Findings | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Extra-capsular extension | Abutment | 1 |
| Irregularity | 3 | |
| Neurovascular bundle thickening | 4 | |
| Bulge, loss of capsule | 4 | |
| Measurable extra-capsular disease | 5 | |
| Seminal vesicles | Expansion | 1 |
| Low T2 signal | 2 | |
| Filling in of angle | 3 | |
| Enhancement and impeded diffusion | 4 | |
| Distal sphincter | Adjacent tumour | 3 |
| Effacement of low signal sphincter muscle | 3 | |
| Abnormal enhancement extending into sphincter | 4 | |
| Bladder neck | Adjacent tumour | 2 |
| Loss of low T2 signal in bladder muscle | 3 | |
| Abnormal enhancement extending into bladder neck | 4 |
PI-RADS scoring system
| Score | Criteria |
|---|---|
| A1. T2WI for the peripheral zone (PZ) | |
| 1 | Uniform high signal intensity (SI) |
| 2 | Linear, wedge shaped, or geographic areas of lower SI, usually not well demarcated |
| 3 | Intermediate appearances not in categories 1/2 or 4/5 |
| 4 | Discrete, homogeneous low signal focus/mass confined to the prostate |
| 5 | Discrete, homogeneous low signal intensity focus with extra-capsular extension/invasive behaviour or mass effect on the capsule (bulging), or broad (>1.5 cm) contact with the surface |
| A2. T2WI for the transition zone (TZ) | |
| 1 | Heterogeneous TZ adenoma with well-defined margins: “organised chaos” |
| 2 | Areas of more homogeneous low SI, however well marginated, originating from the TZ/BPH |
| 3 | Intermediate appearances not in categories 1/2 or 4/5 |
| 4 | Areas of more homogeneous low SI, ill defined: “erased charcoal sign” |
| 5 | Same as 4, but involving the anterior fibromuscular stroma or the anterior horn of the PZ, usually lenticular or water-drop shaped. |
| B. Diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) | |
| 1 | No reduction in ADC compared with normal glandular tissue. No increase in SI on any high b-value image (≥b800) |
| 2 | Diffuse, hyper SI on ≥b800 image with low ADC; no focal features, however, linear, triangular or geographical features are allowed |
| 3 | Intermediate appearances not in categories 1/2 or 4/5 |
| 4 | Focal area(s) of reduced ADC but iso-intense SI on high b-value images (≥b800) |
| 5 | Focal area/mass of hyper SI on the high b-value images (≥b800) with reduced ADC |
| C. Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE)-MRI | |
| 1 | Type 1 enhancement curve |
| 2 | Type 2 enhancement curve |
| 3 | Type 3 enhancement curve |
| +1 | For focal enhancing lesion with curve type 2–3 |
| +1 | For asymmetric lesion or lesion at an unusual place with curve type 2–3 |
| E. Quantitative MRS for 1.5 T. Diagram references [ | |
|
| |
| D2. Qualitative magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) | |
| 1 | Citrate peak height exceeds choline peak height >2 times |
| 2 | Citrate peak height exceeds choline peak height times >1, <2 times |
| 3 | Choline peak height equals citrate peak height |
| 4 | Choline peak height exceeds citrate peak height >1, <2 times |
| 5 | Choline peak height exceeds citrate peak height >2 times |
In qualitative analysis, the relative peak heights of citrate and choline are visually compared (pattern analysis), rather than quantified. The criteria apply for 1.5: for at least three adjacent voxels
Score 1 = Clinically significant disease is highly unlikely to be present
Score 2 = Clinically significant cancer is unlikely to be present
Score 3 = Clinically significant cancer is equivocal
Score 4 = Clinically significant cancer is likely to be present
Score 5 = Clinically significant cancer is highly likely to be present