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Dynamic field‐of‐view imaging to increase temporal resolution in the early phase of contrast media uptake in breast DCE ‐ MRI : A feasibility study
Author(s) -
Pineda Federico D.,
Easley Ty O,
Karczmar Gregory S.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1002/mp.12747
Subject(s) - breast mri , dynamic contrast , image resolution , temporal resolution , breast imaging , medical imaging , contrast (vision) , magnetic resonance imaging , dynamic contrast enhanced mri , resolution (logic) , nuclear medicine , medical physics , nuclear magnetic resonance , mammography , materials science , medicine , radiology , optics , computer science , physics , breast cancer , artificial intelligence , cancer
Purpose To increase diagnostic accuracy of breast MRI by increasing temporal resolution and more accurately sampling the early kinetics of contrast media uptake. We tested the feasibility of accelerating bilateral breast DCE ‐ MRI by reducing the FOV , allowing aliasing, and unfolding the resulting images. Methods Previous experience with an “ultrafast” protocol for bilateral breast DCE ‐ MRI (6–10 s temporal resolution) showed that the number of significantly enhancing voxels is very low in the first 30–45 s after contrast media injection. This suggests that overlap of enhancing voxels in aliased images will be very infrequent. Therefore, aliased images can be acquired during the first 30–45 s after contrast media injection and unfolded to produce full‐ FOV images with few errors. In a proof‐of‐principle test, aliased images were simulated from the first 30 s of full‐ FOV acquisitions. Cases with relatively dense early enhancement were selected to test this method in a worst‐case scenario. In an initial test, an FOV of 60% the size of the full FOV was simulated. To reduce the probability of errors due to overlapping voxels in aliased images, we then tested a dynamic FOV approach. The FOV was progressively increased so that enhancing voxels could not overlap at multiple time‐points, and areas where enhancing voxels overlapped at a given time‐point could be unfolded by interpolating between the preceding and subsequent time‐points (acquired with different FOV s). The simulated FOV sizes for each of the time‐points were 31%, 44%, and 77% of the full FOV . Subtraction images (post‐ minus precontrast) were generated for aliased images and filtered to select significantly enhancing voxels. Comparison of early, highly aliased images, with later, less aliased images then helped to identify the true locations of enhancing voxels. Results In the initial aliasing simulations, an average of 2.9% of the enhancing voxels above the chest wall overlapped in the aliased images (range 0.1%–6.7%). The similarity between simulated unfolded images and the correct full‐ FOV images, evaluated using CW ‐ SSIM (complex wavelet similarity index), was 0.50 ± 0.26, 0.76 ± 0.09, and 0.80 ± 0.10 for the first, second, and third time‐point, respectively (numbers closer to 1 indicate more similar images). For the dynamic FOV tests, an average of 11% of the enhancing voxels above the chest wall overlapped (range 0%–40%) due to greater aliasing at early time‐points. Despite more voxels overlapping, the CW ‐ SSIM values for the data acquired with dynamic FOV s were 0.64 ± 0.25, 0.93 ± 0.04, and 0.97 ± 0.02 for the first, second, and third time‐points, respectively. Conclusions Dynamic FOV imaging allows accelerated bilateral breast DCE ‐ MRI during the early contrast media uptake phase. This method relies on the sparsity of enhancement at the early phases of DCE ‐ MRI of the breast. The results of simulations suggest that dynamic FOV imaging and unfolding produces images that are very close to fully sampled images, and allows temporal resolution as high as 2 s per image.