4.1 Article

Rapid determination of vertebral fat fraction over a large range of vertebral bodies

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL IMAGING AND RADIATION ONCOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 2, Pages 155-163

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/1754-9485.12143

Keywords

magnetic resonance spectroscopy; fat imaging; fat fraction; osteoporosis; magnetic resonance imaging; bone marrow

Funding

  1. Abbott Laboratories Australasia

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Introduction Vertebral body fat fraction (FF) has been found to vary between lumbar vertebrae using magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). We aim to more quickly assess a larger number of adjacent vertebrae using a single T2-weighted iterative decomposition of water and fat with echo asymmetry and least-squares estimation (IDEAL) sequence. Methods Five men had dual-energy X-ray absorptometry (DEXA) and 1.5-T MR scans performed. MRS was performed at L3, and a sagittal IDEAL sequence was also performed, resulting in separate fat-only and water-only readings from T10 to S2. For the IDEAL measurements, two independent observers followed a set reading protocol, with five observations each per vertebra. Intra- and interobserver variability were assessed as deviations from the mean within and between observers, respectively. Results For FF measurements there was limited intra-observer variation, with observers being on average within 3.4% of the pooled mean value. Similarly, there was good interobserver agreement, with an average variation of 2.1%. All men showed a reduction in FF of 1.6-7% between L5 and S1. Otherwise, there was a trend of increasing FF moving inferiorly from T10 to S2. This averaged 2.7% per vertebra (range 1.1-3.8%) and may not have been dependent on MRS-measured FF at the L3 level. There was poor correlation between MRS-measured FF at L2-4 and bone mineral density measured using DEXA (R-2 = 0.06). Conclusion IDEAL measurements are generally reproducible between observers following a set protocol. There appears to be a gradient in FF moving from T10 to S2, with S1 showing a consistent decrease. This variation may better describe overall marrow function than a single-vertebra reading.

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