Abstract
395 Background: The aim of this study was to determine best technique for future preoperative staging and operative planning in colon cancer using MRI at 1.5T, and feasibility at 3.0T. Methods: 39 scans were performed in 4 healthy volunteers comparing bowel distension using different oral contrast techniques; no oral preparation, 1L of water, 1L of poly ethylene glycol (Klean-Prep), and 1L of 2.1% barium sulphate and 3.2% sorbitol solution (E-Z-Cat) at 1.5T. Bowel distension was scored blindly by 2 experienced radiologists. A further 35 scans compared image quality of T2-weighted pulse sequences; 2D-TrueFISP, 3D-TrueFISP, HASTE, 2D-TSE and 3D-TSE. Scans were scored for movement artefact, colon wall and colon mesentery visualisation. Signal to noise ratio (SNR) was calculated. Inter-observer agreement was assessed using Cohen's Kappa. Equivalent optimised protocols were derived at 3.0T and tested for feasibility. Results: Inter-observer agreement for scoring was good (kappa = 0.61-0.67). Sorbitol-barium sulphate gave significantly better small bowel distension than no oral preparation, water and Klean-Prep (mean score 3.8 vs 1.6, 2.2 and 1.9, p≤0.007). 2D TrueFISP sequences gave the highest mean score for scan quality, significantly better than 3D-TSE, 2D-TSE, 3D-TrueFISP and HASTE (mean 10.6 vs 3.2, 7.8, 7.7 and 7.4, p≤0.012). 2D-TSE sequences obtained best SNR, significantly greater than obtained using 3D-TSE (p=0.045). 3.0T sequences were comparable or superior. Conclusions: Colon imaging using MRI requires fast sequences and adequate bowel distension. Our observations indicate that 2D-TrueFISP and 2D-TSE sequences with 1L Sorbitol-Barium sulphate orally give the best T2-weighted images of the colon wall and adjacent structures for cancer staging at 1.5T; equivalent 3.0T protocols are possible. No significant financial relationships to disclose.
Published Version
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