Scientific Reports (Feb 2024)

Low-dose GBCA administration for brain tumour dynamic contrast enhanced MRI: a feasibility study

  • Daniel Lewis,
  • Ka-Loh Li,
  • Mueez Waqar,
  • David J. Coope,
  • Omar N. Pathmanaban,
  • Andrew T. King,
  • Ibrahim Djoukhadar,
  • Sha Zhao,
  • Timothy F. Cootes,
  • Alan Jackson,
  • Xiaoping Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-53871-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract A key limitation of current dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI techniques is the requirement for full-dose gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA) administration. The purpose of this feasibility study was to develop and assess a new low GBCA dose protocol for deriving high-spatial resolution kinetic parameters from brain DCE-MRI. Nineteen patients with intracranial skull base tumours were prospectively imaged at 1.5 T using a single-injection, fixed-volume low GBCA dose, dual temporal resolution interleaved DCE-MRI acquisition. The accuracy of kinetic parameters (ve, Ktrans, vp) derived using this new low GBCA dose technique was evaluated through both Monte-Carlo simulations (mean percent deviation, PD, of measured from true values) and an in vivo study incorporating comparison with a conventional full-dose GBCA protocol and correlation with histopathological data. The mean PD of data from the interleaved high-temporal-high-spatial resolution approach outperformed use of high-spatial, low temporal resolution datasets alone (p < 0.0001, t-test). Kinetic parameters derived using the low-dose interleaved protocol correlated significantly with parameters derived from a full-dose acquisition (p < 0.001) and demonstrated a significant association with tissue markers of microvessel density (p < 0.05). Our results suggest accurate high-spatial resolution kinetic parameter mapping is feasible with significantly reduced GBCA dose.