A Comparison of Methods for High-Spatial-Resolution Diffusion-weighted Imaging in Breast MRI.

Radiology

From the Department of Biomedical Engineering (J.A.M., P.J.B.), Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (J.A.M., S.R., E.J.A., S.M., P.J.B.), Department of Radiology (A.L.C., T.H.E., N.F.H., J.E.K.H., M.T.N., S.R., E.J.A., S.M., P.J.B.), and Biostatistics Core, Masonic Cancer Center (N.R.), Universit

Published: November 2020


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Article Abstract

Background Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) shows promise in detecting and monitoring breast cancer, but standard spin-echo (SE) echo-planar DWI methods often have poor image quality and low spatial resolution. Proposed alternatives include readout-segmented (RS) echo-planar imaging and axially reformatted (AR)-simultaneous multislice (SMS) imaging. Purpose To compare the resolution and image quality of standard SE echo-planar imaging DWI with two high-spatial-resolution alternatives, RS echo-planar and AR-SMS imaging, for breast imaging. Materials and Methods In a prospective study (2016-2018), three 5-minute DWI protocols were acquired at 3.0 T, including standard SE echo-planar imaging, RS echo-planar imaging with five segments, and AR-SMS imaging with four times slice acceleration. Participants were women undergoing breast MRI either as part of a treatment response clinical trial or undergoing breast MRI for screening or suspected cancer. A commercial breast phantom was imaged for resolution comparison. Three breast radiologists reviewed images in random order, including clinical images indicating the lesion, images with value of 800 sec/mm, and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps from the three randomly labeled DWI methods. Readers measured the longest dimension and lesion-average ADC on three DWI methods, reported measurement confidence, and rated or ranked the quality of each image. The scores were fit to a linear mixed-effects model with intercepts for reader and subject. Results The smallest feature (1 mm) was only detectible in a phantom on images from AR-SMS DWI. Thirty lesions from 28 women (mean age, 50 years ± 13 [standard deviation]) were evaluated. On the five-point Likert scale for image quality, AR-SMS imaging scored 1.31 points higher than SE echo-planar imaging and 0.74 points higher than RS echo-planar imaging, whereas RS echo-planar imaging scored 0.57 points higher than SE echo-planar imaging (all < .001). Conclusion The axially reformatted simultaneous multislice protocol was rated highest for image quality, followed by the readout-segmented echo-planar imaging protocol. Both were rated higher than the standard spin-echo echo-planar imaging. © RSNA, 2020 See also the editorial by Partridge in this issue.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7643813PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiol.2020200221DOI Listing

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