4.4 Article

Liver MRI is more precise than liver biopsy for assessing total body iron balance: a comparison of MRI relaxometry with simulated liver biopsy results

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 761-767

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.mri.2015.02.016

Keywords

Relaxometry; Iron overload; Liver; Thalassemia; Sickle cell disease; Monte-Carlo Simulation

Funding

  1. Shire Pharmaceuticals
  2. National Institute of Health [1R01DK097115-01A1]

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Purpose: Liver biopsy was long considered the reference standard for measuring liver iron concentration. However, its high sampling variability and invasive nature make it poorly suited for serial analyses. To demonstrate the fallibility of liver biopsy, we use serial estimates of iron chelation efficiency (ICE) calculated by R2 and R2* MRI liver iron concentration (LIC) estimates as well as by simulated liver biopsy (over all physically reasonable sampling variability) to compare the robustness of these three techniques. Materials and Methods: R2, R2*, transfusional volume, and chelator compliance were obtained from 49 participants in a phase II clinical trial of deferitazole over two years. Liver biopsy LIC results were simulated using sampling errors of 0%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40% and iron assay variability of 12%. LIC estimates by R2, R2*, and simulated biopsy were used to calculate ICE over time. Bland-Altman limits of agreement were compared across observation intervals of 12, 24, and 48 weeks. Results: At 48 week intervals, LIC estimates by R2, R2* and perfect liver biopsy had comparable accuracy in predicting ICE; both MRI methods were superior to any physically realizable liver biopsy (sampling error 10% or higher). LIC by R2* demonstrated the most robust ICE estimates at monitoring intervals of 24 and 12 weeks, but this difference did not remain significant at 48 week intervals. Conclusion: MRI relaxometry is superior to liver biopsy for serial LIC observations, such as used in the care of tranfusional siderosis patients, and should also be considered the new standard of LIC determination for regulatory purposes. Among relaxometry techniques, LIC estimates by R2* are more robust for tracking changes in iron balance over intermediate time scales (<=24 weeks). (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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