Literature DB >> 31549944

Gadoxetate Disodium versus Gadoterate Meglumine: Quantitative Respiratory and Hemodynamic Metrics by Using Compressed-Sensing MRI.

Carl G Glessgen1, Manuela Moor1, Bram Stieltjes1, David J Winkel1, Tobias K Block1, Elmar M Merkle1, Tobias J Heye1, Daniel T Boll1.   

Abstract

Background Gadoxetate disodium has been associated with various respiratory irregularities at arterial imaging MRI. Purpose To measure the relationship between gadolinium-based contrast agent administration and irregularities by comparing gadoxetate disodium and gadoterate meglumine at free breathing. Materials and Methods This prospective observational cohort study (January 2015 to May 2017) included consecutive abdominal MRI performed with either gadoxetate disodium or gadoterate meglumine enhancement. Participants underwent dynamic imaging by using the golden-angle radial sparse parallel sequence at free breathing. The quantitative assessment evaluated the aortic contrast enhancement, the respiratory hepatic translation, and the k-space-derived respiratory pattern. Analyses of variance compared hemodynamic metrics, respiratory-induced hepatic motion, and respiratory parameters before and after respiratory gating. Results A total of 497 abdominal MRI examinations were included. Of these, 338 participants were administered gadoxetate disodium (mean age, 59 years ± 15; 153 women) and 159 participants were administered gadoterate meglumine (mean age, 59 years ± 17; 85 women). The arterial bolus of gadoxetate disodium arrived later than gadoterate meglumine (19.7 vs 16.3 seconds, respectively; P < .001). Evaluation of the hepatic respiratory translation showed respiratory motion occurring in 70.7% (239 of 338) of participants who underwent gadoxetate-enhanced examinations and in 28.9% (46 of 159) of participants who underwent gadoterate-enhanced examinations (P < .001). The duration of motion irregularities was longer for gadoxetate than for gadoterate (19.2 seconds vs 17.2 seconds, respectively) and the motion irregularities were more severe (P < .001). Both the respiratory frequency and amplitude were shorter for participants administered gadoxetate from the prebolus phase to the late arterial phase compared with gadoterate (P < .001). Conclusion The administration of two different gadolinium-based contrast agents, gadoxetate and gadoterate, at free-breathing conditions potentially leads to respiratory irregularities with differing intensity and onset. © RSNA, 2019 Online supplemental material is available for this article.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31549944     DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2019190187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiology        ISSN: 0033-8419            Impact factor:   11.105


  2 in total

1.  A low albumin level as a risk factor for transient severe motion artifact induced by gadoxetate disodium administration: A retrospective observational study with free-breathing dynamic MRI and an experimental study in rats.

Authors:  Takumi Sugiura; Kenichiro Okumura; Motomitsu Sasaki; Junichi Matsumoto; Takahiro Ogi; Norihide Yoneda; Azusa Kitao; Kazuto Kozaka; Wataru Koda; Satoshi Kobayashi; Toshifumi Gabata
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-03-18       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Respiratory anomalies associated with gadoxetate disodium and gadoterate meglumine: compressed sensing MRI revealing physiologic phenomena during the entire injection cycle.

Authors:  Carl Guillaume Glessgen; Hanns-Christian Breit; Tobias Kai Block; Elmar Max Merkle; Tobias Heye; Daniel Tobias Boll
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2021-07-29       Impact factor: 5.315

  2 in total

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