4.8 Article

Non-invasive assessment of hepatic iron stores by MRI

Journal

LANCET
Volume 363, Issue 9406, Pages 357-362

Publisher

LANCET LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(04)15436-6

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Background MRI has been proposed for non-invasive detection and quantification of liver iron content, but has not been validated as a reproducible and sensitive method, especially in patients with mild iron overload. We aimed to assess the accuracy of a simple, rapid, and easy to implement MRI procedure to detect and quantify hepatic iron stores. Methods Of 191 patients recruited, 17 were excluded and 174 studied, 139 in a study group and 35 in a validation group. All patients underwent both percutaneous liver biopsy with biochemical assessment of hepatic iron concentration (B-HIC) and MRI of the liver with various gradient-recalled-echo (GRE) sequences obtained with a 1.5 T magnet. Correlation between liver to muscle (L/M) signal intensity ratio and liver iron concentration was calculated. An algorithm to calculate magnetic resonance hepatic iron concentration (MR-HIC) was developed with data from the study group and then applied to the validation group. Findings A highly T2-weighted GRE sequence was most sensitive, with 89% sensitivity and 80% specificity in the validation group, with an L/M ratio below 0.88. This threshold allowed us to detect all clinically relevant liver iron overload greater than 60 mumol/g (normal value <36 μmol/g). With other sequences, an L/M ratio less than I was highly specific (>87%) for raised hepatic iron concentration. With respect to B-HIC range analysed (3-375 mumol/g), mean difference and 95% CI between B-HIC and MR-HIC were quite similar for study and validation groups (0.8 mumol/g [-6.3 to 7.9] and -2.1 mumol/g [-12.9 to 8.9], respectively). Interpretation MRI is a rapid, non-invasive, and cost effective technique that could limit use of liver biopsy to assess liver iron content. Our MR-HIC algorithm is designed to be used on various magnetic resonance machines.

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