Abstract
To evaluate the diagnostic performance of proton density fat fraction (PDFF) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to differentiate between acute benign and neoplastic vertebral compression fractures (VCFs). Fifty-seven consecutive patients with 46 acute benign and 41 malignant VCFs were prospectively enrolled in this institutional review board approved study and underwent routine clinical MRI with an additional six-echo modified Dixon sequence of the spine at a clinical 3.0-T scanner. All fractures were categorised as benign or malignant according to either direct bone biopsy or 6-month follow-up MRI. Intravertebral PDFF and PDFFratio (fracture PDFF/normal vertebrae PDFF) for benign and malignant VCFs were calculated using region-of-interest analysis and compared between both groups. Additional receiver operating characteristic and binary logistic regression analyses were performed. Both PDFF and PDFFratio of malignant VCFs were significantly lower compared to acute benign VCFs [PDFF, 3.48 ± 3.30% vs 23.99 ± 11.86% (p < 0.001); PDFFratio, 0.09 ± 0.09 vs 0.49 ± 0.24 (p < 0.001)]. The areas under the curve were 0.98 for PDFF and 0.97 for PDFFratio, yielding an accuracy of 96% and 95% for differentiating between acute benign and malignant VCFs. PDFF remained as the only imaging-based variable to independently differentiate between acute benign and malignant VCFs on multivariate analysis (odds ratio, 0.454; p = 0.005). Quantitative assessment of PDFF derived from modified Dixon water-fat MRI has high diagnostic accuracy for the differentiation of acute benign and malignant vertebral compression fractures. • Chemical-shift-encoding based water-fat MRI can reliably assess vertebral bone marrow PDFF • PDFF is significantly higher in acute benign than in malignant VCFs • PDFF provides high accuracy for differentiating acute benign from malignant VCFs.
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