Abstract

Accurate and early assessment of the hepatic fat content is crucial for patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). For years, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been considered the optimal noninvasive method for the assessment of fat accumulation. To avoid time-consuming manual placement of multiple regions of interest (ROI), the use of whole-liver segmentation has been proposed to measure liver fat, mainly for heterogeneous fat deposition. However, it remains uncertain whether the hepatic mean fat fraction (FF) obtained by whole-liver segmentation with the inclusion of intrahepatic vasculature is consistent with the traditional ROI sampling method. In this study, we assessed the accuracy of hepatic mean FF obtained by whole-liver segmentation in patients of NAFLD with different severities using the ROI sampling method as a reference standard. Hepatic FFs were measured by whole-liver segmentation and the ROI sampling method (reference standard) using MRI scanning with the iterative decomposition of water and fat with echo an asymmetry at least-square estimation-iron quantification (IDEAL-IQ) sequence. SPSS version 25.0 software was used to analyze the correlation and consistency of data between the two methods. There was a strong correlation in hepatic FF between whole-liver segmentation and the ROI sampling method in healthy, mild, and moderate steatosis patients (r = 0.943, 0.990, and 0.961, respectively). Bland-Altman analysis showed a small bias of +0.50±0.27 and +0.05±0.30, which indicated a small overestimation when using whole-liver segmentation in healthy subjects and mild NAFLD patients. The 95% limits of agreement ranged from +1.02 to -0.03, and from +0.65 to -0.55, respectively. However, a small bias of -0.96±0.77 was also evident, which indicated a small underestimation when using whole-liver segmentation in moderate NAFLD patients. The 95% limits of agreement ranged from +0.56 to -2.48. Due to inclusion of the intrahepatic vasculature, whole-liver segmentation has some effects on hepatic FF assessment in patients with different NAFLD severities; yet, it does not significantly affect the assessment of whole-liver FF in MRI FF maps.

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