| Literature DB >> 31104178 |
Gabriella Captur1, Ilaria Lobascio2, Yang Ye2,3, Veronica Culotta2, Redha Boubertakh4, Hui Xue5, Peter Kellman5, James C Moon6,7.
Abstract
Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) sequences have evolved. Free-breathing motion-corrected (MOCO) LGE has potential advantages over breath-held (bh) LGE including minimal user input for the short axis (SAX) stack without breath-holds. It has previously been shown that MOCO-LGE delivers high image quality compared to bh-LGE. We sought to conduct an independent validation study to investigate real-world performance of bh-LGE versus MOCO-LGE in a high-throughput CMR center immediately after the introduction of the MOCO-LGE sequence and with elementary staff induction in its use. Four-hundred consecutive patients, referred for CMR and graded by clinical complexity, underwent CMR on either of two scanners (1.5 T, both Siemens) in a UK tertiary cardiac center. Scar imaging was by bh-LGE or MOCO-LGE (both with phase sensitive inversion recovery). Image quality, scan time, reader confidence and report reproducibility were compared between those scanned by bh-LGE versus MOCO-LGE. Readers had > 3 years CMR experience. Categorical variables were compared by χ2 or Fisher's exact tests and continuous variables by unpaired Student's t-test. Inter-rater agreement of LGE reports was by Cohen's kappa. Image quality (low score = better) was better for MOCO-LGE (median, interquartile range [Q1-Q3]: 0 [0-0] vs. 2 [0-3], P < 0.0001). This persisted when just clinically complex patients were assessed (0 [0-1] vs. 2 [1-4] P < 0.0001). Readers were more confident in their MOCO-LGE rulings (P < 0.001) and reports more reproducible [bh-LGE vs. MOCO-LGE: kappa 0.76, confidence interval (CI) 0.7-0.9 vs. 0.82, CI 0.7-0.9]. MOCO-LGE significantly shortened LGE acquisition times compared to bh-LGE (for left ventricle SAX stack: 03:22 ± 01:14 vs 06:09 ± 01:47 min respectively, P < 0.0001). In a busy clinical service, immediately after its introduction and with elementary staff training, MOCO-LGE is demonstrably faster to bh-LGE, providing better images that are easier to interpret, even in the sickest of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac imaging; Fibrosis; Image quality; Late gadolinium enhancement
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31104178 PMCID: PMC6773664 DOI: 10.1007/s10554-019-01620-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging ISSN: 1569-5794 Impact factor: 2.357
Fig. 1Example matched images from 11 selected patients who underwent both bh-LGE (top) and MOCO-LGE (bottom) showcasing the type of artifacts encountered. In the setting of arrhythmia or inability to breath hold, MOCO-LGE offers improved image quality. bh-LGE breath-held late gadolinium enhancement, MOCO motion correction
Adapted qualitative scoring of LGE images (10 image quality criteria appraised)
| LGE criterion | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LV coveragea | Full coverage | – | Apex not covered | Base or ≥ 1 slice missing | 5 |
| Wrap | No | 1 Slice | 2 Slices | ≥ 3 Slices | 3 |
| Respiratory ghost (motion artefact) | No | 1 Slice | 2 Slices | ≥ 3 Slices | 3 |
| Cardiac ghost (motion artefact) | No | 1 Slice | 2 Slices | ≥ 3 Slices | 3 |
| Blurring/mis-trigger | No | 1 Slice | 2 Slices | ≥ 3 Slices | 3 |
| Metallic artifacts | No | 1 Slice | 2 Slices | ≥ 3 Slices | 3 |
| Signal loss (coil inactive)b | Activated | – | Not activated | – | 2 |
| Slice thicknessc | ≤ 10 mm | 11–15 mm | – | > 15 mm | 3 |
| Inter-slice gapc | < 3 mm | 3–4 mm | – | > 4 mm | 3 |
| Correct LV long axisd | ≥ 3 | 2 | 1 | None | 3 |
| Total LGE score | 31 |
LGE late gadolinium enhancement, LV left ventricle
aFor ‘LV coverage’, maximum (and worst) possible rating for this criterion was 5; inadequate apical coverage (2 points); inadequate basal coverage; ≥ 1 additional slice(s) missing (3 points)
bIf relevant coils had not been activated resulting in signal loss, 2 points were given, otherwise 0
cSlice thickness and slice gap were fixed for our protocols so all study patients scored 0 for this criterion
dFor ‘Correct long axis’ 3 points were given if all long axis slices were missing (4-, 3-, and 2-chamber), 2 points if 2 long axis images were missing, 1 point if 1 long axis was missing
Fig. 2Reader confidence estimation methods used in this study. a Basic analytic method: C0 and C1 denote pre- and post-test confidence on a 0% to 100% scale, irrespective of whether the pre- and post-test diagnosis matched or not. b Retained diagnosis method: removes from consideration cases in which the post-test diagnosis differs from the pretest diagnosis and only considers reads with unchanged (or “retained”) diagnoses and ci–iii Omary method: considers all cases and estimates C1 minus C0 except for the situation where diagnoses differ and C0 is < 50%, in which case C1 is calculated as: C1 − (100 – C0)
Fig. 3Example MOCO-LGE images illustrating the variety of LGE patterns observed in the sampled cohort. a Subendocardial chronic myocardial infarction, b transmural chronic myocardial infarction, c mid-wall enhancement in patient with dilated cardiomyopathy, d basal lateral wall subepicardial enhancement in a patient with previous myocarditis, e patchy anteroseptal scar in a patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and f trace of superior and inferior right ventricular insertion points. Other abbreviations as in Fig. 1
Clinical and demographic characteristics of study patients
| Variable | MOCO-LGE (n = 200) | bh-LGE (n = 200) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | |||
| Female (%) | 85 (43) | 72 (36) | 0.219 |
| Age (y) | 55 ± 16 | 50 ± 15 |
|
| Ethnicity | |||
| White (%) | 120 (60) | 108 (54) | 0.543 |
| Black (%) | 16 (8) | 36 (18) | 0.096 |
| Mixed/multiple (%) | 2 (1) | 4 (2) | 0.622 |
| Asian, Asian British (%) | 46 (23) | 40 (20) | 0.698 |
| Other | 16 (8) | 12 (6) | 0.698 |
| Clinical characteristics | |||
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 29 ± 6 | 28 ± 6 | 0.096 |
| Diabetes mellitus (%) | 50 (25) | 40 (20) | 0.434 |
| Hypertension (%) | 138 (69) | 112 (56) |
|
| Dyslipidaemia | 102 (51) | 82 (41) | 0.120 |
| Current cigarette smoking | 102 (51) | 70 (35) | 0.113 |
| History of atrial fibrillation or flutter | 44 (22) | 32 (16) | 0.368 |
| Inpatient status | 20 (10) | 12 (6) | 0.183 |
| Prior coronary revascularization | 30 (15) | 32 (16) | 0.887 |
| Acute myocardial infarction | 4 (2) | 8 (4) | 0.503 |
| Prior myocardial infarction | 60 (30) | 48 (24) | 0.342 |
| Clinical complexity score | 0.72 ± 1.15 | 0.41 ± 0.84 |
|
| Laboratory characteristics | |||
| Creatinine (mg/dL) | 84 ± 29 | 85 ± 31 | 0.739 |
| Glomerular filtration rate (mL/min/1.73 m2) | 86 ± 26 | 85 ± 25 | 0.695 |
| Clinical indication for CMR | |||
| Known or suspected cardiomyopathy | 41 (21) | 54 (27) | 0.580 |
| Possible CAD/stress perfusion | 106 (53) | 95 (48) | 0.317 |
| Myocarditis (new or follow up) | 9 (5) | 14 (7) | 0.389 |
| Evaluation for arrhythmia substrate | 11 (6) | 8 (4) | 0.639 |
| Family screening | 5 (2) | 3 (1) | 0.723 |
| Adult congenital heart disease | 4 (2) | 7 (3) | 0.543 |
| Mass or thrombus | 3 (1) | 2 (1) | 1.000 |
| Other | 21 (10) | 17 (9) | 0.610 |
Data reported as mean ± standard deviation, counts (%) or median (interquartile ranges 1–3). Other abbreviations as in Table 1
Significant P values highlighted in bold
bh breath-held, MI myocardial infarction, MOCO motion-corrected, CAD coronary artery disease, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, y years
CMR characteristics of study cohorts
| CMR Variable | MOCO-LGE (n = 200) | bh-LGE (n = 200) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| LV ejection fraction (%) | 60 ± 13 | 63 ± 11 |
|
| LV mass index (g/m2) | 65 ± 30 | 63 ± 21 | 0.440 |
| LV end-systolic volume index (mL/m2) | 36 ± 26 | 32 ± 16 | 0.065 |
| LV end-diastolic volume index (mL/m2) | 83 ± 29 | 81 ± 20 | 0.423 |
| Left atrial area (cm2) | 12 ± 3 | 12 ± 3 | 1.000 |
| LV wall thickness | |||
| None or borderline (< 10 mm|0–13 mm) | 174 (87) | 172 (86) | 0.764 |
| Mild or moderate (14 mm|≥ 15 mm < 30 mm) | 26 (13) | 28 (14) | |
| Severe (≥ 30 mm) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | – |
| Effusion (pericardial, pleural, ascites) | 26 (13) | 20 (10) | 0.434 |
| LGE data | |||
| No LGE | 119 (60) | 120 (60) | 1.000 |
| LGE pattern | |||
| Subendocardial chronic MI | 27 (13) | 24 (12) | 0.764 |
| Transmural chronic MI | 21 (10) | 15 (7) | 0.383 |
| Acute MI MVO dark core | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 1.000 |
| Mid-wall | 15 (8) | 19 (10) | 0.590 |
| Subepicardial | 14 (7) | 15 (8) | 1.000 |
| Patchy | 14 (7) | 16 (8) | 0.841 |
| RV insertion points | 25 (12) | 21 (11) | 0.639 |
| LGE not analysable | 0 (0) | 1 (1) | 1.000 |
| Image quality score | 0 (0–0) | 2 (0–3) |
|
| Reader confidence by method | |||
| Basic analytic | 24.0 ± 16.2 | 15.9 ± 18.4 |
|
| Retained diagnostic | 22.8 ± 15.4 | 15.9 ± 16.9 |
|
| Omary correction | 32.2 ± 21.3 | 24. 5 ± 22.3 |
|
| LGE SAX stack module (min) | 03:22 ± 01:14 | 06:09 ± 01:47 |
|
| Complete LGE module (min) | 06:01 ± 02:28 | 09:21 ± 02:34 |
|
| LGE phase swap done | 43 (22) | 58 (29) |
|
Data reported as mean ± standard deviation, counts (%), or as median (inter-quartile range Q1–Q3). Other abbreviations as in Tables 1 and 2
Significant P values highlighted in bold
MI myocardial infarction, MVO microvascular obstruction, RV right ventricle, SAX short axis