Literature DB >> 35434012

Standard diffusion-weighted, diffusion kurtosis and intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging of the whole placenta: a pilot study of volumetric analysis.

Tao Lu1, Yishuang Wang1, Aiwen Guo1, Cui Wei1, Yazheng Chen1, Shaoyu Wang2, Bin Song3.   

Abstract

Background: Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to explore the changes in microvascular perfusion fraction and the heterogeneity of the placenta during pregnancy.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 24 patients with normal pregnancies who underwent standard diffusion-weighted, diffusion kurtosis, and intravoxel incoherent motion MRI. The mean, minimum and maximum parameters including the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and exponential ADC (eADC) from standard diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), the diffusion coefficient (MD) and diffusion kurtosis (MK) from diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI), and the pure diffusion coefficient (D), pseudo-diffusion coefficient (D*) and perfusion fraction (f) from intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging (IVIM) were calculated from the whole placenta volumetric analysis and correlated with gestational age (GA) and volume of the placenta.
Results: A significant positive correlation was found between eADC mean, eADC max, MK mean, MK max, the volume of the whole placenta, and GA, and a negative correlation was found between ADC mean, ADC min, MD min, D mean, D min, D* min and GA. The f mean and MK max values positively correlated with the volume of the whole placenta. Conclusions: eADC mean, eADC max, MK mean, MK max values increased with GA, while ADC mean, ADC min, MD min, D mean, D min, D* min decreased with GA. Secondly, the f mean and MK max also increased with placental volume. These results suggest the potential of diffusion and perfusion parameters to evaluate the placenta during its development using different DWI models. 2022 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI); diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (diffusion MRI); intravoxel incoherent motion; magnetic resonance imaging; placenta

Year:  2022        PMID: 35434012      PMCID: PMC9011236          DOI: 10.21037/atm-22-1037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Transl Med        ISSN: 2305-5839


Introduction

The placenta is a highly specialized organ that supports the continuing growth and development of the fetus and facilitates physiological exchange with the mother. The intervillous space is where the maternal and fetal circulations coincide, with the maternal blood bathing the villi and draining back through endometrial veins to ensure the necessary blood supply, efficient transfer of nutrients and gases, and waste removal (1). Changes in placental development and function can dramatically affect the fetus and result in a wide range of pregnancy complications, including pre-eclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), and abruption (2). Ultrasound (US) is the firstline modality used during pregnancy, but it is limited in the evaluation of placental function and physiological characteristics. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a safe and complementary imaging modality to ultrasound, ensuring further evaluation of the placenta and the fetus with high-resolution and soft-tissue contrast, especially when the findings from US are equivocal. A growing number of studies have used functional MRI to monitor placental blood flow and function because it is a versatile technique that is free of ionizing radiation and exogeneous contrast agents (3-5). Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), a method measuring the Brownian motion of water molecules and noninvasively evaluating tissue biophysical characteristics, is already routinely used in placental MRI (6-9). Conventional DWI is based on Gaussian diffusion behavior and follows a mono-exponential model. With the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), information on the microscopic motion of water protons is revealed. However, due to diffusion barriers, such as membranes and organelles, diffusion of water molecules in biological tissue is more confined and complicated (10). First proposed by Jensen et al., diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) is a non-Gaussian diffusion-weighted model capable of describing the complicated water diffusivity in histological tissue and better reflects tissue heterogeneity and cellularity with high b-values (11). Recently, DKI has been adopted for the evaluation of tumors and neurological diseases (12-18). Intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging (IVIM) is a bi-exponential model initially proposed by Le Bihan (19) that helps distinguish pure molecular diffusion from capillary perfusion when separating the fast perfusion-driven component from a slow diffusion-driven component. First introduced into placental MRI in the 2000s (20-22), IVIM is now widely used in the evaluation of placenta accreta spectrum disorders (PAS) disorders, placental insufficiency, and small for gestational age (GA) neonates (23-26). The hybrid IVIM-DKI model is the combination of different diffusion models, namely IVIM and DKI. In recent years, it was developed from the increasing number of studies on the assessment of tumors (12,14,15,27,28). Because different tissue characteristics can be achieved with mono- and bi-exponential DWI and DKI, there may be value in investigating their roles in the evaluation of placental function. The hybrid IVIM-DKI model has yet to be adopted in the evaluation of GA-related changes in tissue characteristics in the placenta. Previous volumetric analysis of placenta mainly studied the correlation between placental volume and change of gestational age (29). However, placental cellular heterogeneity and hemodynamic effects also change with the increasing gestational age. Therefore, the aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of the hybrid model in the evaluation of perfusion, diffusion, and the microscopic structural complexity of the placenta during gestation. We present the following article in accordance with the MDAR reporting checklist (available at https://atm.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/atm-22-1037/rc).

Methods

Study population

The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2013). This study was approved by the institutional review board of Sichuan Provincial People’s Hospital (approval No. 2021-282) and written informed consent was given by all participants. Patients with singleton pregnancies attending scans for underlying PAS disorders at 19–38 weeks between December 2018 and May 2020 were included in the study. All pregnancies were dated by US scan in the first trimester. Patients with placental abnormalities (n=42), inadequate surgical records (n=27), or severe artifact (n=2) were excluded. Patients with hypertension (n=2), pre-existing renal disease (n=1), diabetes mellitus (n=3), and claustrophobia (n=1) were also excluded (). Data of pregnancy outcomes were obtained from maternity records or the patients’ general practitioners. A normal pregnancy was defined as a healthy, singleton pregnant woman giving birth at term (≥37 weeks of gestation) to a newborn with appropriate weight for GA (birth weight within ±2 standard deviations of the Chinese reference standard for newborns) (30).
Figure 1

Flowchart of the study design. PAS, placenta accreta spectrum disorders; MR, magnetic resonance; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging.

Flowchart of the study design. PAS, placenta accreta spectrum disorders; MR, magnetic resonance; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging.

MR techniques

MRI examinations were performed with a 1.5-T MR scanner (Aera, Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany) using a 16-channel body coil. Besides routine MR sequences (HASTE, Tru-fisp, and T1WI) used for placental MRI, single-shot echo planar imaging (EPI-DWI) was performed to obtain isotropic images with a pair of rectangular diffusion gradient pulses along all three orthogonal axes. The following imaging parameters were used: TR/TE: 5,200/83 ms, acquisition matrix: 192×120, field of view (FOV): 288×384 mm, number of averages: 2, slice thickness/intersection gap: 5 mm/1 mm and parallel imaging acceleration factor: 2. In addition, 11 different b-values (b=0, 50, 100, 150, 200, 400, 600, 800, 1,000, 1,200 and 1,600 s/mm2) were applied. The total scan time for the DWI sequence was 7 min 29 s.

Imaging analysis

Standard mono-exponential DWI is expressed as (12): where Sb and S0 are the signal intensities in the diffusion gradient factors of b and 0, respectively. With b-values being 0 and 1,000 s/mm2, ADC can be calculated by fitting the signal to this model and the exponential ADC (eADC) is calculated using the formula: DKI parameters, including MD and MK, are achieved with the following Eq. [1]: where Sb and S0 are the signal intensities acquired with the diffusion gradient factors of b and 0, respectively, along with 6 b-values (b=0, 400, 800, 1,000, 1,200, and 1,600 s/mm2). MD is the mean diffusivity representing the corrected ADC, MK is the diffusion kurtosis. The IVIM bi-exponential model is expressed as [2,3]: where Sb and S0 are the signal intensities in the diffusion gradient factors of b and 0, respectively. By fitting MR signal acquired at 8 b-values (b=0, 50, 100, 150, 200, 400, 600, 800 s/mm2), the IVIM parameters, including f, D and D*, can be derived from the model. f is the perfusion fraction, D is the diffusion coefficient, and D* is the pseudo-diffusion coefficient representing pure molecular diffusion and incoherent microcirculation within the voxel, respectively. The ADC, eADC, IVIM parameters and DKI parameters were measured with research software IMAgenGINE (Vusion Tech) (31). Two observers with 3 and 10 years, respectively, of experience in obstetric imaging independently carried out the measurement of the whole placenta. shows the region of interest (ROI) of one slice of the placenta. The volume of the placenta, the mean, minimum and maximum ADC (ADC mean, ADC min, and ADC max), eADC (eADC mean, eADC min, and eADC max), MD (MD mean, MD min, and MD max), MK (MK mean, MK min, and MK max), D (D mean, D min, and D max), D* (D* mean, D* min, and D* max) and f (f mean, f min, and f max) values were automatically calculated using all slices of the DWI images covering the whole placenta. MRI scans of the DWI, ADC, eADC, f, D*, D, MD, and MK maps were also automatically produced (). The inter-reader reproducibility was calculated from the measurements made by the two readers and the measurements were averaged for statistical analysis.
Figure 2

ROI of one slice of the placenta. ROI, region of interest.

Figure 3

Diffusion weighted images of the placenta in a 37-week-old gestation woman. T2WI, T2 weighted imaging; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis.

ROI of one slice of the placenta. ROI, region of interest. Diffusion weighted images of the placenta in a 37-week-old gestation woman. T2WI, T2 weighted imaging; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis.

Statistical analysis

Depending on the distribution of variables, the parameters of the placenta from standard DWI, DKI, and IVIM are presented either as mean ± standard deviation or median and the interquartile range. The inter-reader reproducibility for parameter measurements was evaluated using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). An ICC <0.20 indicated slight reproducibility, between 0.21 and 0.40 indicated fair, between 0.41 and 0.60 indicated moderate, between 0.61 and 0.80 indicated substantial, and between 0.81 and 1.00 indicated perfect reproducibility. Spearman correlations were used to characterize the correlations between the parameters of standard DWI, DKI, and IVIM and gestational week and volume of the placenta. A correlation coefficient rho (r) of ≤0.24 was deemed as indicating little or no correlation; 0.25–0.49, fair correlation; 0.50–0.74, moderate to good correlation; and 0.75–1.00 very good to excellent correlation; P values <0.05 were statistically significant. All analyses were performed with SPSS 21.0.

Results

Population characteristics

A total of 24 pregnant women with satisfactory images remained in the analysis. The mean maternal age was 30.09±4.17 years (range, 22–37 years), and the mean GA at examination was 31.64±4.33 weeks (range, 24–38 weeks). All medical records were received postpartum. Nine patients had placenta previa. The method of delivery included 21 cases of cesarean delivery and 3 cases of vaginal delivery.

Diffusion metrics

shows the inter-reader reproducibility for the DWI, DKI, IVIM parameters, and the whole placenta volume. Overall, the interobserver agreement between readers was good for the whole placenta volumetric analysis. The agreement on diffusion parameters was perfect for ADC mean, ADC min, ADC max, eADC mean, eADC min, eADC max, MD mean, MK mean, f mean, D mean, D min, D max, D* mean, D* min and volume of the whole placenta. The agreement on MD min, MD max, and MK max was substantial between two observers. The average value of the two measurements was used for further analyses.
Table 1

Inter-reader reproducibility for DWI, DKI, IVIM parameters and volume of the whole placenta

ParametersICC (95% CI)P value
Standard DWI parameters
   ADC mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.988 (0.955–0.997)0.000
   ADC min (×10–3 mm2/s)0.842 (0.505–0.958)0.001
   ADC max (×10–3 mm2/s)0.903 (0.664–0.975)0.000
   eADC mean0.991 (0.965–0.998)0.000
   eADC min0.844 (0.504–0.959)0.001
   eADC max0.964 (0.870–0.991)0.000
DKI parameters
   MD mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.870 (0.562–0.966)0.000
   MD min (×10–3 mm2/s)0.751 (0.249–0.932)0.005
   MD max (×10–3 mm2/s)0.767 (0.341–0.935)0.002
   MK mean0.991 (0.965–0.998)0.000
   MK minN/AN/A
   MK max0.790 (0.383–0.958)0.002
IVIM parameters
   f mean (%)0.896 (0.647–0.973)0.000
   f min (%)N/AN/A
   f max (%)N/AN/A
   D mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.980 (0.924–0.995))0.000
   D min (×10–3 mm2/s)0.892 (0.639–0.972)0.000
   D max (×10–3 mm2/s)0.950 (0.822–0.987)0.000
   D* mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.832 (0.454–0.956)0.000
   D* min (×10–3 mm2/s)0.990 (0.962–0.998)0.000
   D* max (×10–3 mm2/s)N/AN/A
   Volume (mL)0.953 (0.831–0.956)0.000

DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; ICC, intraclass correlation coefficient; CI, confidence interval; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient.

DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; ICC, intraclass correlation coefficient; CI, confidence interval; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient. The ADC mean of the placenta was 1.51 (0.12)×10–3 mm2/s, ADC min was (0.39±0.23)×10–3 mm2/s, ADC max was (2.52±0.17)×10–3 mm2/s, eADC mean of the placenta was 1.51 (0.12), eADC min was 0.02±0.00, eADC max was 0.57±0.20, MK mean was 0.55 (0.05), MK min was 0, MK max was 1.97±1.63, MD mean was (2.93±0.30)×10-3 mm2/s, MD min was (0.06±0.43)×10–3 mm2/s, MD max was (1.07±0.39)×10–3 mm2/s, f mean was 0.41±0.39, f min was 0 and f max was 1, D mean was 1.57 (0.14)×10–3 mm2/s, D min was (0.44±0.35)×10–3 mm2/s, D max as (2.53±0.19)×10–3 mm2/s, D* mean was (32.65±7.56)×10–3 mm2/s, D* min was 0 and D* max was 100×10–3 mm2/s. shows the correlations between the quantitative MR parameters, the volume of the whole placenta, and the gestational week in the normal placenta. The eADC mean, eADC max, MK mean, MK max values and volume of the whole placenta positively correlated with the gestational week (r=0.565, 0.460, 0.524,0.801 and 0.566, respectively; all P<0.05), whereas the ADC mean, ADC min, MD min, D mean, D min and D* min values negatively correlated with gestational week (r=–0.508, –0.548, –0.673, –0.552, –0.697 and –0.594, respectively; all P<0.05).
Table 2

Correlation between quantitative MRI parameters, volume of the whole placenta and the gestational week in the normal placenta

ParametersGestational weeks
r (95% CI)P value
Standard DWI parameters
   ADC mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.508 (–0.787 to 0.074)0.016
   ADC min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.548 (–0.816 to 0.061)0.008
   ADC max (×10–3 mm2/s)0.048 (–0.323 to 0.339)0.833
   eADC mean0.565 (–0.085 to 0.846)0.006
   eADC min0.252 (–0.528 to 0.141)0.258
   eADC max0.460 (0.055 to 0.747)0.031
DKI parameters
   MD mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.195 (–0.601 to 0.254)0.362
   MD min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.673 (–0.874 to 0.438)0.001
   MD max (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.236 (–0.546 to 0.255)0. 291
   MK mean0.524 (0.069 to 0.807)0.012
   MK minN/AN/A
   MK max0.801 (0.504 to 0.928)0.008
IVIM parameters
   f mean (%)0.103 (–0.310 to 0.399)0.650
   f min (%)–0.328 (–0.602 to 0.260)0.136
   f max (%)N/AN/A
   D mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.552 (–0.828 to 0.144))0.008
   D min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.697 (–0.873 to 4.238)0.000
   D max (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.167 (–0.509 to 0.20)0.457
   D* mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.147 (–0.451 to 0.498)0.515
   D* min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.594 (–0.811 to 0.239)0.004
   D* max (×10–3 mm2/s)N/AN/A
   Volume (mL)0.566 (0.149 to 0.834)0.006

MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CI, confidence interval; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient.

MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CI, confidence interval; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient. shows the correlations between the quantitative MR parameters and the volume of the whole placenta. The f mean and MK max positively correlated with the volume of the whole placenta (r=0.509 and 0.518, respectively; all P<0.05).
Table 3

Correlation between quantitative MRI parameters and volume of the whole placenta

Parameters      Volume
      r (95% CI)P value
Standard DWI parameters
   ADC mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.156 (–0.592 to 0.347)0.488
   ADC min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.231 (–0.619 to 0.304)0.301
   ADCmax (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.141 (–0.562 to 0.193)0.533
   eADC mean0.171 (–0.328 to 0.592)0.446
   eADC min–0.111 (–0.507 to 0.315)0.622
   eADC max0.254 (0.249 to 0.682)0.255
DKI parameters
   MD mean (×10–3 mm2/s)0.266 (–0.187 to 0.658)0.232
   MD min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.343 (–0.681 to 0.129)0.118
   MD max (×10–3 mm2/s)0.105 (–0.376 to 0.539)0. 642
   MK mean0.250 (–0.238 to 0.645)0.261
   MK minN/AN/A
   MK max0.518 (0.1 to 0. 8)0.014
IVIM parameters
   f mean (%)0.509 (0.046 to 0.774)0.015
   f min (%)–0.292 (–0.598 to 0.119)0.187
   f max (%)N/AN/A
   D mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.168 (–0.598 to 0.321))0.456
   D min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.377 (–0.734 to 0.085)0.084
   D max (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.220 (–0.604 to 0.234)0.326
   D* mean (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.325 (–0.701 to 0.163)0.140
   D* min (×10–3 mm2/s)–0.198 (–0.609 to 0.368)0.378
   D* max (×10–3 mm2/s)N/AN/A

MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CI, confidence interval; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient.

MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CI, confidence interval; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; eADC, exponential ADC; DKI, diffusion kurtosis imaging; MD, diffusion coefficient; MK, diffusion kurtosis; IVIM, intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging; f, perfusion fraction; D, pure diffusion coefficient; D*, pseudo-diffusion coefficient.

Discussion

The human placenta grows fast and undergoes structural and functional changes during pregnancy. This study aimed to explore the microstructural complexity, water diffusion, and vascular perfusion of the placenta during pregnancy using the potential of ADC, eADC, MD, MK, f, D, and D* from different DWI models. In most of the previous studies, IVIM parameters were usually measured on a representative section of the placenta from manually placed ROIs (32-35), which may cause interobserver variability in ROI selection and inaccurate reflection of the placenta’s physiological features due to inappropriate ROI selection. We adopted whole placenta volumetric analysis to assess the parameters from different DWI models of the entire placenta to avoid subjective ROI placement, ensure accuracy and repeatability of the calculation, and potentially eliminate sampling bias during data processing. The interobserver agreement was excellent between two reviewers for all the parameters. Therefore, the VOI (volume of interest)-based estimation of DWI parameters was highly reproducible and repeatable. The negative correlation between ADC (ADC mean and ADC min) and gestational week in patients was similar to the findings of Capuani et al. (32). The decrease of ADC with the increase in GA might be due to calcium deposition and fibrosis, leading to barriers to diffusion, which usually occur with the maturation of the placenta, especially during the last gestational weeks (36). Our results demonstrated that D (D mean and D min) and MD (MD min) inversely correlated with increased GA. MD derived from DKI was a corrected ADC value, reflecting water molecular diffusion with non-Gaussian diffusion behavior, which had a similar meaning to ADC derived from the mono-exponential model. Meanwhile, D derived from IVIM was a pure molecular diffusion coefficient without microcapillary perfusion influence. Therefore, it is reasonable to find a negative correlation simultaneously between diffusion-related parameters and GA. As the fibrotic environment of the placenta developed during the last gestational weeks, the ADC min will decrease with the increase in GA. The ADC min showed a lower ADC value for certain placental regions containing calcium deposits and fibrotic tissue. D min and MD min decreased in the same way as ADC min. The D min value with the highest r among all the above parameters negatively correlated with GA, indicating that the D min value could be a promising parameter for depicting the maturity of the placenta. A negative correlation between D* min and the gestational week was found in this study. D* is a perfusion-related parameter that reflects blood movement in the intervillous spaces and fetal capillaries within the villi (22). D* min represents the lower D* value in certain placental regions with calcification and fibrosis and decreased blood movement. Therefore, blood movement decreased in such areas as the placenta matured with GA. A positive correlation between eADC (eADC mean and eADC max), MK (MK mean and MK max), and gestational week was found in this study. eADC is another DWI parameter to avoid the T2 shine-through effect (37). The area with more diffusion restriction, such as from calcium deposits and fibrosis, might show a relative hyperintensity (high eADC value) compared with an adjacent area with less diffusion restriction (low eADC value) on the eADC map. Therefore, the eADC (eADC mean and eADC max) value positively correlated with GA, while the ADC (ADC mean and ADC min) value negatively correlated with GA. The placenta with closely packed and extensively branched villous structures comprises the chorionic plate, chorionic basal plate, and the intervillous spaces. The development of the placental villous tree is a continuous process from primary villi to mature terminal villi characterized by elongated unbranched capillaries (2). The terminal villi formation occurs exponentially in the third trimester to ensure sufficient surface area for gas and nutrient exchange. The MK from DKI quantifies the deviation of water molecule diffusion following a Gaussian distribution and indirectly reflects the complexity of the microstructure and heterogeneity of the tissue. The greater the MK value the greater tissue complexity. In a healthy placenta, the MK value represents the complexity of the tissue within the placenta, and the MK max represents the higher MK value from certain placental regions with more complex and restricted tissue structure. Therefore, the MK value increases with GA as the placental villi grow. The MK max value with the highest r positively correlated with GA, indicating that the MK max value could be a promising parameter for evaluating the tissue complexity of the placenta. The IVIM is a bi-exponential model that describes microscale translational movement within imaging voxels with f, representing the relative amount of blood flow in the vascular bed (34). The mean placental perfusion fraction was 41%, similar to the research of Siauve et al. (42.5%) (38), but higher than in other previous reports (21-23,26,31,34). Controversy remains whether the perfusion fraction is stable during gestation or whether it increases or decreases (26,32,33,38). Our results showed that the perfusion fraction did not correlate with GA, which was consistent with the studies of Siauve et al. (38) and Derwig et al. (26), but positively correlated with the volume of the whole placenta. The number and surface area of the placental villi increase with placental volume growth. Thus, the blood flow within the placenta also increases with the growth of the placental vascular bed, resulting in a higher perfusion fraction. The deviation of tissue water molecule diffusion was measured with MK from a Gaussian distribution, which typically implied a more complex tissue microstructure. The positive correlation between MK max and the volume of the placenta might be due to the changes in the spatial arrangement and dimensions of the placental vessels with the growth of capillaries in the placenta. Therefore, the MK max value could be used as a parameter to demonstrate the complicated formation of terminal villi characterized by looping and coiling capillaries. As the placenta grows and matures, the diffusion, perfusion, and heterogeneity of the placenta change accordingly. The hybrid IVIM-DKI model can be used to simultaneously evaluate placental function. However, our study still had some limitations. Firstly, the power of statistical analysis may be limited by the small number of participants with a normal placenta. However, this study could be considered as preliminary for future study with larger sample sizes. Secondly, the hybrid IVIM-DKI model was acquired under free-breathing, resulting in decreased signal-to-noise ratio on parameter maps. It was impossible to perform breath-hold imaging of pregnant women, so the free-breathing protocol in this study was utilized. The good reproducibility of results confirmed the reliability of measurements. Thirdly, the maximum b value utilized in this study was 1,600 s/mm2, which is smaller than the 2,000 s/mm2 recommended for rectal, renal, and hepatic lesions (13,14,39). With higher b-values, the effects of the restricted diffusion and superiority of the DKI model over the simple ME model can be elucidated and highlighted. However, in the clinical setting, higher b-values could lead to relatively low SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) of the images and decreased accuracy of the fitting equation. Previous abdominal DKI study has indicated that at least three b-values and three directions applied to each b value with a maximum optimal range of 1,500–2,000 s/mm2 are appropriate for the DKI sequence (10). In this study, 11 b-values in the range of 0 to 1,600 s/mm2 in three orthogonal directions were adopted in the DKI sequence. It is feasible to use this hybrid IVIM-DKI model in placental imaging because the protocol in this study showed satisfactory overall imaging quality with perfect interobserver agreement. Future investigation using this hybrid model might examine the functional changes in PAS disorders, intrauterine growth restriction and preeclampsia. In conclusion, this preliminary study showed that the D min value could depict the maturing of the placenta with increasing GA, and MK max can depict the greater tissue complexity of the placenta with the increasing of both GA and volume of the placenta. The perfusion fraction stayed stable during gestation but increased with the volume of the whole placenta. The article’s supplementary files as
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1.  Exponential apparent diffusion coefficient in evaluating prostate cancer at 3 T: preliminary experience.

Authors:  Sung Y Park; Chan K Kim; Jung J Park; Byung K Park
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2015-12-10       Impact factor: 3.039

2.  Differentiating between malignant and benign solid solitary pulmonary lesions: are intravoxel incoherent motion and diffusion kurtosis imaging superior to conventional diffusion-weighted imaging?

Authors:  Qi Wan; Ying-Shi Deng; Qiang Lei; Ying-Ying Bao; Yu-Ze Wang; Jia-Xuan Zhou; Qiao Zou; Xin-Chun Li
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2018-09-25       Impact factor: 5.315

3.  Use of intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging to assess placental perfusion in a murine model of placental insufficiency.

Authors:  Marianne Alison; Gihad E Chalouhi; Gwennhael Autret; Daniel Balvay; Rokhaya Thiam; Laurent J Salomon; Charles André Cuenod; Olivier Clement; Nathalie Siauve
Journal:  Invest Radiol       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 6.016

4.  Intravoxel incoherent motion imaging using steady-state free precession.

Authors:  D Le Bihan
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  1988-07       Impact factor: 4.668

5.  Microvascular perfusion of the placenta, developing fetal liver, and lungs assessed with intravoxel incoherent motion imaging.

Authors:  András Jakab; Ruth L Tuura; Raimund Kottke; Nicole Ochsenbein-Kölble; Giancarlo Natalucci; Thi Dao Nguyen; Christian Kellenberger; Ianina Scheer
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2017-12-27       Impact factor: 4.813

6.  Use of intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging to assess placental perfusion in patients with placental adhesion disorder on their third trimester.

Authors:  Tao Lu; Hong Pu; Wei Cui; Jie Mei; Meng-Wei Huang; Shao-Yu Wang
Journal:  Clin Imaging       Date:  2019-03-30       Impact factor: 1.605

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Authors:  J Kingdom; B Huppertz; G Seaward; P Kaufmann
Journal:  Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 2.435

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Authors:  Yanfen Cui; Xiaotang Yang; Xiaosong Du; Zhizheng Zhuo; Lei Xin; Xintao Cheng
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2017-10-23       Impact factor: 5.315

9.  Prognosticators of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) MRI for adverse maternal and neonatal clinical outcomes in patients with placenta accreta spectrum disorders.

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Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2020-04

10.  Can introvoxel incoherent motion MRI be used to differentiate patients with placenta accreta spectrum disorders?

Authors:  Tao Lu; Hong Pu; Kui-de Li; Jie Mei; Meng-Wei Huang; Shao-Yu Wang
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2019-12-30       Impact factor: 3.007

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