| Literature DB >> 30078377 |
Ali Serhal1,2, Ioannis Koktzoglou2,3, Pascale Aouad1, James C Carr1, Shivraman Giri4, Omar Morcos5, Robert R Edelman6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Comparing cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) angiography with computed tomography angiography (CTA), a major deficiency has been its inability to reliably image peripheral vascular calcifications that may impact the choice of interventional strategy and influence patient prognosis. Recently, MRI using a proton density-weighted, in-phase stack of stars (PDIP-SOS) technique has proved capable of detecting these calcifications. The goal of the present study was two-fold: (1) to determine whether magnetic field strength impacts the apparent size and conspicuity of ilio-femoral arterial calcifications; and (2) to determine whether the technique can be accurately applied to image aorto-iliac arterial calcifications. MAIN BODY: Two patient cohorts were studied. For the first cohort, ilio-femoral arterial calcifications were imaged at 1.5 Tesla in 20 patients and at 3 Tesla in 12 patients. For the second cohort, aorto-iliac arterial calcifications were imaged in 10 patients at 3 Tesla and one patient at 1.5 Tesla. Qualitative image analysis as well as quantitative analysis using a semi-automated technique were performed using CTA as the reference standard. Qualitatively, most PDIP-SOS CMR images showed good-to-excellent confidence to detect vascular calcifications, with good-to-excellent inter-reader agreement (κ = 0.67 for ilio-femoral region, P < 0.001; κ = 0.80 for aorto-iliac region, P < 0.01). There was an overall excellent correlation (r = 0.98, P < 0.001) and agreement (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.97, P < 0.001) between PDIP-SOS CMR and CTA measures of calcification volume in both regions, with no overt difference in performance at 1.5 Tesla vs. 3 Tesla for ilio-femoral calcifications. CMR lesion volumes were slightly lower than those measured for CTA.Entities:
Keywords: CT angiography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Peripheral arterial disease; Quiescent-interval slice-selective; Stack of stars; Vascular calcification
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30078377 PMCID: PMC6091148 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-018-0479-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Examples of PDIP-SOS CMR (right) in comparison to CTA (left) for: (a) 66-year-old female imaged at 1.5 Tesla showing mild vascular calcifications (Group 1), (b) 80-year-old male imaged at 1.5 Tesla showing moderate vascular calcifications (Group 2), and (c) 68-year-old female imaged at 3 Tesla showing severe vascular calcifications (Group 3). Vascular calcifications (arrows) appear dark with PDIP-CMR (presented as thin minimum intensity projections), and bright with CTA (presented as thin maximum intensity projections). There is excellent correlation between CMR and CTA irrespective of lesion severity
Fig. 2Scatter plots of ilio-femoral calcification volume as measured by PDIP-SOS CMR versus CTA at (a) both magnetic field strengths, (b) 1.5 T, and (c) 3 T, as well as by severity of calcification (d)-(f). Linear regression equations are shown at bottom right. Solid lines and gray areas show the lines of best fit and the 95% confidence intervals, respectively. Dashed lines are lines of unity
Fig. 3Evaluation of the aorto-iliac vessels using PDIP-SOS CMR. (a) Healthy volunteer. Left: QISS nonenhanced CMR angiogram used for positioning the stack of stars imaging slab. Middle: PDIP-SOS CMR using the legacy k-space encoding approach of acquiring all radial views in rapid sequence. There are severe ghost artifacts arising from centrally-located bowel loops that obscure the iliac vessels (arrows). Right: Identical PDIP-SOS acquisition except that all slice partitions (instead of radial views) were acquired in rapid sequence. The bowel-related artifacts are eliminated, so that the iliac vessels are well shown (arrows). Note that both the aorto-iliac and ilio-femoral regions are encompassed in the field of view, allowing simultaneous assessment of both regions. (b) Patient with aorto-iliac calcifications. Left, middle: 4-mm thick minimum intensity projections from PDIP-SOS CMR clearly depict vascular calcifications involving the distal aorta and proximal iliac vessels. Right: Thin-slab maximum intensity coronal projection from the CT shows excellent correspondence with the PDIP-SOS CMR
Fig. 4Scatter plot of aorto-iliac calcification volume as measured by PDIP-SOS CMR versus CTA. Linear regression equation is shown at bottom right. The solid line and gray area show the line of best fit and the 95% confidence interval, respectively. Dashed line shows the line of unity