4.7 Article

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

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 297, Issue 2, Pages 304-312

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2020200221

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [UL1-TR002494]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIH P41 EB027061, NIH S10OD017974-01, NIH R21CA201834]

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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 b value of 800 sec/mm(2), 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 P < .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. (C) RSNA. 2020

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