Abstract
The purpose of this study was to accelerate MR cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) acquisitions using deep learning-based (DL) reconstruction at 3 and 0.55 T. A total of 35 healthy volunteers underwent conventional twofold accelerated MRCP scans at field strengths of 3 and 0.55 T. We trained DL reconstructions using two different training strategies, supervised (SV) and self-supervised (SSV), with retrospectively sixfold undersampled data obtained at 3 T. We then evaluated the DL reconstructions against standard techniques, parallel imaging (PI) and compressed sensing (CS), focusing on peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and structural similarity (SSIM) as metrics. We also tested DL reconstructions with prospectively accelerated acquisitions and evaluated their robustness when changing fields strengths from 3 to 0.55 T. DL reconstructions demonstrated a reduction in average acquisition time from 599/542 to 255/180 s for MRCP at 3 T/0.55 T. In both retrospective and prospective undersampling, PSNR and SSIM of DL reconstructions were higher than those of PI and CS. At the same time, DL reconstructions preserved the image quality of undersampled data, including sharpness and the visibility of hepatobiliary ducts. In addition, both DL approaches produced high-quality reconstructions at 0.55 T. In summary, DL reconstructions trained for highly accelerated MRCP enabled a reduction in acquisition time by a factor of 2.4/3.0 at 3 T/0.55 T while maintaining the image quality of conventional acquisitions.
Published Version
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