Abstract

Diffusion-weighted (DW) and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are increasingly applied for the assessment of functional tissue biomarkers for diagnosis, lesion characterization, or for monitoring of treatment response. However, these techniques are vulnerable to the influence of various factors, so there is a necessity for a standardized MR quality assurance procedure utilizing a phantom to facilitate the reliable estimation of repeatability of these quantitative biomarkers arising from technical factors (e.g., B1 variation) affecting acquisition on scanners of different vendors and field strengths. The purpose of this study is to present a novel phantom designed for use in quality assurance for multicenter trials, and the associated repeatability measurements of functional and quantitative imaging protocols across different MR vendors and field strengths. A cylindrical acrylic phantom was manufactured containing 7 vials of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) solutions of different concentrations, ranging from 0% (distilled water) to 25% w/w, to create a range of different MR contrast parameters. Temperature control was achieved by equilibration with ice-water. Repeated MR imaging measurements of the phantom were performed on four clinical scanners (two at 1.5 T, two at 3.0 T; two vendors) using the same scanning protocol to assess the long-term and short-term repeatability. The scanning protocol consisted of DW measurements, inversion recovery (IR) T1 measurements, multiecho T2 measurement, and dynamic T1-weighted sequence allowing multiple variable flip angle (VFA) estimation of T1 values over time. For each measurement, the corresponding calculated parameter maps were produced. On each calculated map, regions of interest (ROIs) were drawn within each vial and the median value of these voxels was assessed. For the dynamic data, the autocorrelation function and their variance were calculated; for the assessment of the repeatability, the coefficients of variation (CoV) were calculated. For both field strengths across the available vendors, the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) at 0 °C ranged from (1.12 ± 0.01) × 10(-3) mm(2)/s for pure water to (0.48 ± 0.02) × 10(-3) mm(2)/s for the 25% w/w PVP concentration, presenting a minor variability between the vendors and the field strengths. T2 and IR-T1 relaxation time results demonstrated variability between the field strengths and the vendors across the different acquisitions. Moreover, the T1 values derived from the VFA method exhibited a large variation compared with the IR-T1 values across all the scanners for all repeated measurements, although the calculation of the standard deviation of the VFA-T1 estimate across each ROI and the autocorrelation showed a stability of the signal for three scanners, with autocorrelation of the signal over the dynamic series revealing a periodic variation in one scanner. Finally, the ADC, the T2, and the IR-T1 values exhibited an excellent repeatability across the scanners, whereas for the dynamic data, the CoVs were higher. The combination of a novel PVP phantom, with multiple compartments to give a physiologically relevant range of ADC and T1 values, together with ice-water as a temperature-controlled medium, allows reliable quality assurance measurements that can be used to measure agreement between MRI scanners, critical in multicenter functional and quantitative imaging studies.

Highlights

  • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a powerful noninvasive imaging modality in oncology

  • DW-MRI gives signal contrast derived from random motion of water molecules in biological tissues and depends on tissue structure; the derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) is modulated by the presence of macromolecules, interactions with cell membranes, and flow within vessels

  • This study presents a new phantom containing multiple compartments of PVP solutions at ice-water temperatures for the quality assurance of functional and quantitative imaging across different MRI platforms

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Summary

Introduction

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a powerful noninvasive imaging modality in oncology. DW-MRI gives signal contrast derived from random motion of water molecules in biological tissues and depends on tissue structure; the derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) is modulated by the presence of macromolecules, interactions with cell membranes, and flow within vessels.. DW-MRI gives signal contrast derived from random motion of water molecules in biological tissues and depends on tissue structure; the derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) is modulated by the presence of macromolecules, interactions with cell membranes, and flow within vessels.1,2 The sensitivity of this technique to water diffusion properties of tissue is generated by application of gradient pulses of varying amplitudes, separations, and durations, summarized by the parameter known as the b-value. Precontrast T1 is calculated using the VFA method with one or more (precontrast) volume from the dynamic scan and a matched volume acquired with a distinct (usually lower) flip angle.

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