Intra-and inter-examination repeatability of magnetic resonance spectroscopy, magnitude-based MRI, and complex-based MRI for estimation of hepatic proton density …

A Tyagi, O Yeganeh, Y Levin, JC Hooker… - Abdominal …, 2015 - Springer
A Tyagi, O Yeganeh, Y Levin, JC Hooker, GC Hamilton, T Wolfson, A Gamst, AK Zand…
Abdominal imaging, 2015Springer
Purpose Determine intra-and inter-examination repeatability of magnitude-based magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI-M), complex-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI-C), and
magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) at 3T for estimating hepatic proton density fat
fraction (PDFF), and using MRS as a reference, confirm MRI-M and MRI-C accuracy.
Methods Twenty-nine overweight and obese pediatric (n= 20) and adult (n= 9) subjects (23
male, 6 female) underwent three same-day 3T MR examinations. In each examination MRI …
Purpose
Determine intra- and inter-examination repeatability of magnitude-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI-M), complex-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI-C), and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) at 3T for estimating hepatic proton density fat fraction (PDFF), and using MRS as a reference, confirm MRI-M and MRI-C accuracy.
Methods
Twenty-nine overweight and obese pediatric (n = 20) and adult (n = 9) subjects (23 male, 6 female) underwent three same-day 3T MR examinations. In each examination MRI-M, MRI-C, and single-voxel MRS were acquired three times. For each MRI acquisition, hepatic PDFF was estimated at the MRS voxel location. Intra- and inter-examination repeatability were assessed by computing standard deviations (SDs) and intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs). Aggregate SD was computed for each method as the square root of the average of first repeat variances. MRI-M and MRI-C PDFF estimation accuracy was assessed using linear regression with MRS as a reference.
Results
For MRI-M, MRI-C, and MRS acquisitions, respectively, mean intra-examination SDs were 0.25%, 0.42%, and 0.49%; mean intra-examination ICCs were 0.999, 0.997, and 0.995; mean inter-examination SDs were 0.42%, 0.45%, and 0.46%; and inter-examination ICCs were 0.995, 0.992, and 0.990. Aggregate SD for each method was <0.9%. Using MRS as a reference, regression slope, intercept, average bias, and R 2, respectively, for MRI-M were 0.99%, 1.73%, 1.61%, and 0.986, and for MRI-C were 0.96%, 0.43%, 0.40%, and 0.991.
Conclusion
MRI-M, MRI-C, and MRS showed high intra- and inter-examination hepatic PDFF estimation repeatability in overweight and obese subjects. Longitudinal hepatic PDFF change >1.8% (twice the maximum aggregate SD) may represent real change rather than measurement imprecision. Further research is needed to assess whether examinations performed on different days or with different MR technologists affect repeatability of MRS voxel placement and MRS-based PDFF measurements.
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