Abstract

ObjectivesTo investigate the diagnostic accuracy of lung magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with a free-breathing three-dimensional ultrashort echo time spoiled gradient echo sequence using a stack-of-spirals acquisition (spiral 3D UTE) for pulmonary nodule detection at 3 T in oncology patients. MethodsThe institutional review board approved this retrospective study. Between June and September of 2017, 32 oncology patients underwent both free-breathing spiral 3D UTE of the lungs and thin-section chest computed tomography (CT) for pulmonary metastasis workups. Semiquantitative analyses of the visible pulmonary vessels, bronchi, mediastinum, and overall image quality on spiral 3D UTE were assessed by two reviewers; CT was used as the reference standard. The probability of nodule presence also was assessed. ResultsThe mean acquisition duration of the spiral 3D UTE was 327 s (range, 300–465 s). The pulmonary vessels and bronchi were visible nearly consistently up to the sub-sub-segmental branch levels on spiral 3D UTE (96.9% [31/32] and 90.6% [29/32], respectively). >90% of the spiral 3D UTE images had an acceptable or good mediastinal evaluation; >80% had good or excellent overall image quality. Fifty nodules (6.1 ± 5.9 mm) were identified in 13 patients on CT; the overall nodule detection rate of spiral 3D UTE was 86% (43/50). All 20 nodules ≥ 5 mm in diameter were identified on spiral 3D UTE (100%). ConclusionsFree-breathing spiral 3D UTE had high sensitivity for the detection of pulmonary nodules, a reasonable scan duration, and acceptable image quality, which may make it a potential alternative to CT for oncology patients.

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