Abstract

IntroductionWe present the reliability of ultra-high field T2* MRI at 7T, as part of the UK7T Network's “Travelling Heads” study. T2*-weighted MRI images can be processed to produce quantitative susceptibility maps (QSM) and R2* maps. These reflect iron and myelin concentrations, which are altered in many pathophysiological processes. The relaxation parameters of human brain tissue are such that R2* mapping and QSM show particularly strong gains in contrast-to-noise ratio at ultra-high field (7T) vs clinical field strengths (1.5–3T). We aimed to determine the inter-subject and inter-site reproducibility of QSM and R2* mapping at 7T, in readiness for future multi-site clinical studies. MethodsTen healthy volunteers were scanned with harmonised single- and multi-echo T2*-weighted gradient echo pulse sequences. Participants were scanned five times at each “home” site and once at each of four other sites. The five sites had 1× Philips, 2× Siemens Magnetom, and 2× Siemens Terra scanners. QSM and R2* maps were computed with the Multi-Scale Dipole Inversion (MSDI) algorithm (https://github.com/fil-physics/Publication-Code). Results were assessed in relevant subcortical and cortical regions of interest (ROIs) defined manually or by the MNI152 standard space. Results and DiscussionMean susceptibility (χ) and R2* values agreed broadly with literature values in all ROIs. The inter-site within-subject standard deviation was 0.001–0.005 ppm (χ) and 0.0005–0.001 ms−1 (R2*). For χ this is 2.1–4.8 fold better than 3T reports, and 1.1–3.4 fold better for R2*. The median ICC from within- and cross-site R2* data was 0.98 and 0.91, respectively. Multi-echo QSM had greater variability vs single-echo QSM especially in areas with large B0 inhomogeneity such as the inferior frontal cortex. Across sites, R2* values were more consistent than QSM in subcortical structures due to differences in B0-shimming. On a between-subject level, our measured χ and R2* cross-site variance is comparable to within-site variance in the literature, suggesting that it is reasonable to pool data across sites using our harmonised protocol. ConclusionThe harmonized UK7T protocol and pipeline delivers on average a 3-fold improvement in the coefficient of reproducibility for QSM and R2* at 7T compared to previous reports of multi-site reproducibility at 3T. These protocols are ready for use in multi-site clinical studies at 7T.

Highlights

  • We present the reliability of ultra-high field T2∗ magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 7T, as part of the UK7T Network’s “Travelling Heads” study

  • The reproducibility of Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping (QSM) χ and R2∗ measurements in cortical and subcortical regions of the brain was assessed for the first time in a multi-site study at 7T for two different protocols, using three different scanner platforms provided by two different vendors

  • The reproducibility of QSM using single-echo, highresolution (0.7 mm isotropic resolution; TE = 20ms) and multi-echo standard-resolution (1.4 mm isotropic resolution; TE = 4, 9, 14, 19, 24, 29, 34 and 39 ms) protocols were compared, and the results show that the multi-echo QSM data has a significantly higher variability than single-echo QSM

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Summary

Introduction

We present the reliability of ultra-high field T2∗ MRI at 7T, as part of the UK7T Network’s “Travelling Heads” study. This paramagnetic iron interacts with the MRI scanner’s static magnetic field (B0) causing local dipolar field perturbations These accentuate the rate of transverse signal decay causing T2∗ relaxation in surrounding tissue, which is visible as decreasing signal amplitude with increasing echo time in a series of GE images. This effect causes an increase in the rate of transverse relaxation, R2∗, which correlates well with non-heme iron concentrations in grey matter (Gelman et al, 1999; Langkammer et al, 2010), and has been used to investigate the distribution of iron in the healthy brain and in disease (Haacke et al, 2005; Yao et al, 2009; Li et al, 2019)

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