| Literature DB >> 30201013 |
Rajiv Ramasawmy1, Toby Rogers1, Miguel A Alcantar1, Delaney R McGuirt1, Jaffar M Khan1, Peter Kellman1, Hui Xue1, Anthony Z Faranesh1, Adrienne E Campbell-Washburn1, Robert J Lederman2, Daniel A Herzka1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The hallmark of heart failure is increased blood volume. Quantitative blood volume measures are not conveniently available and are not tested in heart failure management. We assess ferumoxytol, a marketed parenteral iron supplement having a long intravascular half-life, to measure the blood volume with cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR).Entities:
Keywords: Blood volume; CMR; Ferumoxytol; Heart failure; MRI; T 1 mapping
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30201013 PMCID: PMC6131893 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-018-0486-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
T1 values (mean ± SD, n = 12) at baseline and after administration of a 0.7 mg/kg dose of ferumoxytol, across the measurement protocol duration for the LV blood pool, RV blood pool and myocardial tissue (myo) from the repeatability study
| 4 min | 20 min | 60 min | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LV | 1604.2 ± 27.7 | 232.0 ± 12.3 | 250.6 ± 15.7 | 281.4 ± 19.7 |
| RV | 1807.9 ± 96.8 | 235.9 ± 14.5 | 257.1 ± 20.3 | 289.0 ± 21.7 |
| myo | 1135.0 ± 80.2 | 837.2 ± 42.9 | 844.5 ± 63.3 | 860.1 ± 59.3 |
Fig. 1a Example long-axis T1 maps and regions-of-interest (ROI) over the duration of a study, and typical T1 (intra-ROI mean ± SD) recovery profile post-contrast and the corresponding volume V′(t), calculated from Eq. 3, for the (b) left-ventricle (LV) and paired (c) right-ventricle (RV). A linear fit from 20 to 40 min (solid line) is used to measure the half-life of the contrast agent. The plasma volume can be estimated by extrapolating to the model to 0 min (dotted line)
Fig. 2Repeatability of the blood volume (V) measurement: a Ladder plot between two repeat visits of N = 6 swine, b Bland-Altman comparison of technique reproducibility: mean difference and standard deviation = 8.6 ± 6.7 mL/kg. c Bland-Altman comparison to carbon monoxide estimates of circulating blood volume: mean difference and standard deviation = − 3.0 ± 25.7 mL/kg
Fig. 3Results from Monte Carlo simulations (n = 10,000) on the effects on goodness-of-fit (r2) and plasma volume standard deviation ( as a function of increasing the number of samples from 26 min (Protocol 2) (a, b) and increasing the time of the ‘anchor’ point from 30 min (Protocol 3) (c, d). Shaded regions correspond to the standard deviation of the goodness-of-fit (r2), and the points selected for in vivo analysis have been marked a red arrow. Dotted lines correspond to a 3, 2 and 1% plasma volume standard deviation in b, d and f respectively. Simulations of a potential ‘human protocol’ with an increasing number of acute post-contrast sampling (e, f) reveal that measurements as early as 6 min (red arrow) yield an approximate 1% standard deviation in plasma volume
Fig. 4Comparison of optimal abbreviated acquisition protocols to fully-sampled reference 60 min acquisitions: linear correlations and Bland-Altman plots of biases for the repeated euvolemic conditions. The tested reduced-protocol acquisition points are represented by the orange circles in the left-hand column: Protocol 1 calculates plasma volume (Vplasma) from a single point; the earliest post-contrast administration point. Protocol 2 and Protocol 3 respectively use an early set of successive measurements (5 points) and a reduced set of early measurements and a late ‘anchor’ (4 points) for optimal linear fitting, respectively. Each technique agrees well with the fully sampled dataset, though increased sampling over a longer period improves both bias and correlation
Comparison of measuring blood volume (Vblood) with reduced ferumoxytol doses (N = 1, for each dose) in mg/kg of iron (Fe), and percentage of the typical dose used in this study (N = 12). Smaller doses resulted in a reduced change in post-contrast LV T1, and a shorter ferumoxytol half-life, but did not produce a significantly different normalized blood volume (p = 0.95, Mann-Whitney U), and except for the 50% dose, the percentage differences from the blood volumes for each subject were within the calculated repeatability coefficient (14%)
| Conc. Fe (mg/kg) | Δ | Half-life (hr) | %Δ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.69 ± 0.01 | −85.5 ± 0.7 | 3.43 ± 0.49 | 88.1 ± 9.4 | – |
| 0.30 (50%) | − 74.6 | 2.55 | 79.9 | −17.5 |
| 0.23 (20%) | − 65.9 | 2.93 | 95.4 | 12.1 |
| 0.13 (10%) | −53.9 | 2.51 | 86.2 | −5.7 |