4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

3-t MRI for differentiating inflammation- and fibrosis-predominant lesions of usual and nonspecific interstitial pneumonia: Comparison study with pathologic correlation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
Volume 190, Issue 4, Pages 878-885

Publisher

AMER ROENTGEN RAY SOC
DOI: 10.2214/AJR.07.2833

Keywords

idiopathic interstitial pneumonia; MRI; 3 T

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OBJECTIVE. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the utility of 3-T MRI of the lung for differentiating inflammation- and fibrosis-predominant lesions in the usual and nonspecific types of interstitial pneumonia. SUBJECTS AND METHODS. The subjects were 26 patients (10 men, 16 women; mean age, 57 +/- 9 [SD] years; 16 with nonspecific interstitial pneumonia; 10 with usual interstitial pneumonia) who underwent 3-T MRI of the lung and surgical biopsy. A total of 54 biopsy sites were classified histopathologically into two groups: inflammation predominant and fibrosis predominant. After a T2-weighted triple-inversion black blood turbo spin-echo (TSE) sequence, dynamic MRI was performed with a T1-weighted 3D turbo field-echo sequence (coronal images with 2.5-mm slice thickness) before and 1, 3, 5, and 10 minutes after IV contrast injection. The chi-square test was used to compare differences in signal intensity on T2-weighted triple-inversion black blood TSE MR images and visually assessed enhancement patterns at dynamic MRI for the inflammation- and fibrosis-predominant sites. RESULTS. Inflammation-predominant specimens were obtained from 31% (17 of 54) of the biopsy sites. Inflammation-predominant biopsy sites had an early enhancement pattern (82%, 14 of 17 sites, p < 0.001) on dynamic studies and high signal intensity (53%, nine of 17 sites, p = 0.001) on T2-weighted triple-inversion black blood TSE images. CONCLUSION. Multiphase dynamic enhancement studies with a turbo field-echo sequence and T2-weighted triple-inversion black blood TSE images on 3-T MRI appear to be useful for differentiating inflammation- and fibrosis-predominant lesions.

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