Abstract

T2-FLAIR is the single most sensitive MRI contrast to detect lesions underlying focal epilepsies but 3D sequences used to obtain isotropic high-resolution images are susceptible to motion artefacts. Prospective motion correction (PMC) – demonstrated to improve 3D-T1 image quality in a pediatric population – was applied to high-resolution 3D-T2-FLAIR scans in adult epilepsy patients to evaluate its clinical benefit. Coronal 3D-T2-FLAIR scans were acquired with a 1mm isotropic resolution on a 3T MRI scanner. Two expert neuroradiologists reviewed 40 scans without PMC and 40 with navigator-based PMC. Visual assessment addressed six criteria of image quality (resolution, SNR, WM-GM contrast, intensity homogeneity, lesion conspicuity, diagnostic confidence) on a seven-point Likert scale (from non-diagnostic to outstanding). SNR was also objectively quantified within the white matter. PMC scans had near-identical scores on the criteria of image quality to non-PMC scans, with the notable exception that intensity homogeneity was generally worse. Using PMC, the percentage of scans with bad image quality was substantially lower than without PMC (3.25% vs. 12.5%) on the other five criteria. Quantitative SNR estimates revealed that PMC and non-PMC had no significant difference in SNR (P=0.07). Application of prospective motion correction to 3D-T2-FLAIR sequences decreased the percentage of low-quality scans, reducing the number of scans that need to be repeated to obtain clinically useful data.

Highlights

  • The primary purpose of MRI in individuals with epilepsy is to detect focal epileptogenic lesions

  • We evaluate prospective motion correction (PMC) for 3D-T2-FLAIR acquisitions in adult epilepsy patients, to investigate its clinical benefits to overall image quality and scan time efficiency

  • Even with motion detected in such a large proportion of the segments, image quality is still good despite clear intensity inhomogeneity

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Summary

Introduction

The primary purpose of MRI in individuals with epilepsy is to detect focal epileptogenic lesions. PROMO, Prospective Motion correction (GE Healthcare proprietary term). ଝ Part of this work was previously presented at the 25th annual scientific meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM), in Honolulu, Hawai’I, United States, 2017. Been demonstrated to be superior to standard MRI protocols [1], leading to guidelines including 3D-T1, T2, and T2-FLAIR imaging [2,3,4,5,6], with T2-FLAIR the single-most sensitive over all lesion types (85%) [3]

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