| Literature DB >> 28992817 |
Daniel R Messroghli1,2,3, James C Moon4, Vanessa M Ferreira5, Lars Grosse-Wortmann6, Taigang He7, Peter Kellman8, Julia Mascherbauer9, Reza Nezafat10, Michael Salerno11, Erik B Schelbert12,13,14, Andrew J Taylor15, Richard Thompson16, Martin Ugander17, Ruud B van Heeswijk18, Matthias G Friedrich19,20,21,22.
Abstract
Parametric mapping techniques provide a non-invasive tool for quantifying tissue alterations in myocardial disease in those eligible for cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). Parametric mapping with CMR now permits the routine spatial visualization and quantification of changes in myocardial composition based on changes in T1, T2, and T2*(star) relaxation times and extracellular volume (ECV). These changes include specific disease pathways related to mainly intracellular disturbances of the cardiomyocyte (e.g., iron overload, or glycosphingolipid accumulation in Anderson-Fabry disease); extracellular disturbances in the myocardial interstitium (e.g., myocardial fibrosis or cardiac amyloidosis from accumulation of collagen or amyloid proteins, respectively); or both (myocardial edema with increased intracellular and/or extracellular water). Parametric mapping promises improvements in patient care through advances in quantitative diagnostics, inter- and intra-patient comparability, and relatedly improvements in treatment. There is a multitude of technical approaches and potential applications. This document provides a summary of the existing evidence for the clinical value of parametric mapping in the heart as of mid 2017, and gives recommendations for practical use in different clinical scenarios for scientists, clinicians, and CMR manufacturers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28992817 PMCID: PMC5633041 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-017-0389-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Definitions of technical terms in the field of parametric mapping of the heart
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| T1 [ms] | Time constant representing the recovery of longitudinal magnetization (spin–lattice relaxation) |
| Native T1 | T1 in the absence of an exogenous contrast agent |
| T2 [ms] | Time constant representing the decay of transverse magnetization (spin-spin relaxation) |
| T2* [ms] | Time constant representing the decay of transverse magnetization in the presence of local field inhomogeneities |
| ECV [%] | Extracellular volume fraction, calculated by |
| Synthetic ECV [%] | ECV where hematocrit is not measured by laboratory blood sampling but derived from blood T1 |
| Parametric mapping | A process where a secondary image is generated in which each pixel represents a specific magnetic tissue property (T1, T2, or T2*) or a derivative such as ECV) derived from the spatially corresponding voxel of a set of co-registered magnetic resonance source images |
Clinical utility of parametric mapping techniques ordered by pathophysiologic mechanism and tissue characteristics. ++ = useful; + = potentially useful;? = unknown; − = not useful. *: Diffuse/global refers to findings affecting the majority of the myocardium, whereas focal/regional refers to localized, including patchy abnormalities
| T1 (native) | ECV | T2 | T2* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infiltration | Iron | + | ? | + | ++ |
| Amyloid | ++ | ++ | ? | – | |
| Anderson-Fabry | ++ | – | + | – | |
| Acute myocardial injury | Edema | ++ | + | ++ | ? |
| Necrosis | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | |
| Hemorrhage | + | ? | + | ++ | |
| Fibrosis | Diffuse/global* | + | ++ | ? | – |
| Focal/regional* | + | ++ | – | – | |
Clinical utility of parametric mapping techniques according to expert opinion
| Proven clinical utility | Iron deposition |
|---|---|
| Amyloid disease | |
| Anderson-Fabry disease | |
| Myocarditis | |
| Potential clinical utility | Cardiomyopathy |
| Heart failure | |
| Congenital heart disease | |
| Acute/chronic myocardial infarction | |
| Myocardial ischemia | |
| Suspected transplant rejection | |
| Athlete’s heart | |
| (Para-)cardiac masses |
Fig. 1Typical appearance of T1, T2, T2*, and ECV maps in healthy subjects and in patients with myocardial disease. Arrows denote relative change in respective parametric maps. Courtesy of P.K
Fig. 2General imaging protocol for myocardial tissue characterization including parametric mapping. The choice of components depends on the clinical scenario (see Tables 2 and 4). For slice orientations see Table 4. STIR = Short TI inversion recovery. 1: Should be obtained immediately before the scan if possible, otherwise within 24 h of scanning. Not necessary if synthetic ECV available. 3: Search tool for focal myocardial edema. Dispensable if high-quality T1 and/or T2 mapping is performed with full LV coverage. 3&5: Not necessary in non-acute disease. 6: Not necessary if iron is not of interest. 7–9: Not necessary if both focal and diffuse myocardial fibrosis are not of interest
Recipe table for specific parametric mapping protocols. SAX = short axis slice, 3Ch = 3 chamber view, 4Ch = 4 chamber view, T1 = T1 mapping, T2 = T2 mapping, T2* = T2* mapping
| Scenario | Pulse sequences/slice orientations | Breathholds |
|---|---|---|
| Amyloid | T1 mid and basal SAX, 4Ch |
|
| repeated post contrast | ||
| T2 mid SAX, | ||
| T2* - | ||
| Anderson-Fabry | T1 mid and basal SAX, 3Ch |
|
| repeated post contrast (research) | ||
| T2 basal SAX | ||
| T2* - | ||
| Iron overload | T1 mid and basal SAX, 4Ch |
|
| not post contrast | ||
| T2 liver single transverse | ||
| T2* mid SAX, liver single transverse | ||
| Myocarditis, acute myocardial infarction, other regional disease | T1 SAX multi-slice, long axis (through region of hyper-intensity on STIR or regional wall motion abnormality on cine) |
|
| repeated post contrast | ||
| T2 SAX multi-slice | ||
| T2* - | ||
| Diffuse fibrosis | T1 mid and basal SAX, 4Ch (research) |
|
| repeated post contrast | ||
| T2 (research) | ||
| T2* - |
Fig. 3Alterations of T1 and ECV in different myocardial diseases (reproduced with permission from [193]). T1 values refer to MOLLI-based techniques at 1.5 T
Typical alterations of T1, T2, T2* relaxation times and ECV according to pathology. For further details see Captur et al. [194]
| Measure | Decrease | Mild increase | Moderate or severe increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Native T1 | Anderson-Fabry, iron overload, fat, hemorrhage (athlete’s heart) | diffuse fibrosis, scar, subacute inflammation | amyloid, acute inflammation, acute ischemia, necrosis |
| ECV | athlete’s heart | diffuse fibrosis | amyloid, necrosis, scar |
| T2 | iron, hemorrhage | subacute inflammation | acute inflammation, acute ischemia, necrosis |
| T2* | iron, hemorrhage, stress-induced ischemia |
Fig. 4Roadmap for developing biomarkers derived from parametric mapping
| Name | Conflicts of interest | Email address |
|---|---|---|
| Andrew Arai | Siemens – Research Agreements (US Government Cooperative Research and Development Agreement) | araia@nih.gov |
| Colin Berry | The University of Glasgow (employer of C.B) holds a research agreement with Siemens Healthcare | colin.berry@glasgow.ac.uk |
| David Bluemke | Siemens: research agreement and speaker | dbluemke@rsna.org |
| Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci(for EACVI) | - CBD is supported by the NIHR Biomedical Centre at the University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Bristol. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the National Institute for Health Research or the Department of Health. | c.bucciarelli-ducci@bristol.ac.uk |
| Kelvin Chow | KC is a full-time employee of Siemens Healthcare. KC holds patent applications on the use of variable flip angle ramping for bSSFP quantitative magnetization prepared imaging (US Patent 2015/016,0320 A1) and on the use of high-contrast imaging for improving image registration of free-breathing data (US Patent 2017/007,6449 A1) | kc3nu@hscmail.mcc.virginia.edu |
| David Higgins | Employee of Philips | david.higgins@philips.com |
| Michael Jerosch-Herold | I have no conflicts to disclose | mjerosch-herold@bwh.harvard.edu |
| Tim Leiner(for the Publications Committee of SCMR) | I have no conflict of interest in relation to the content of this consensus document | t.leiner@umcutrecht.nl |
| Stefan Neubauer | No relevant disclosures | stefan.neubauer@cardiov.ox.ac.uk |
| Dudley Pennell | Research support from Siemens, and Director & Shareholder in CVIS (T2* analysis software) | dj.pennell@rbht.nhs.uk |
| Subha Raman | Institutional research support from Siemens | raman.1@osu.edu |
| Jeanette Schulz-Menger | no conflict of interest in relation to the content of this consensus document | jeanette.schulz-menger@charite.de |
| Glenn Slavin | Employment by GE Healthcare | glenn.slavin@ge.com |