Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology (Mar 2017)

Pulmonary fibrosis: tissue characterization using late-enhanced MRI compared with unenhanced anatomic high-resolution CT

  • Lisa P. Lavelle,
  • Darragh Brady,
  • Sinead McEvoy,
  • David Murphy,
  • Brian Gibney,
  • Annika Gallagher,
  • Marcus Butler,
  • Fionnula Shortt,
  • Marie McMullen,
  • Aurelie Fabre,
  • David A. Lynch,
  • Michael P. Keane,
  • Jonathan D. Dodd

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5152/dir.2016.15331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 2
pp. 106 – 111

Abstract

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PURPOSE:We aimed to prospectively evaluate anatomic chest computed tomography (CT) with tissue characterization late gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the evaluation of pulmonary fibrosis (PF).METHODS:Twenty patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and twelve control patients underwent late-enhanced MRI and high-resolution CT. Tissue characterization of PF was depicted using a segmented inversion-recovery turbo low-angle shot MRI sequence. Pulmonary arterial blood pool nulling was achieved by nulling main pulmonary artery signal. Images were read in random order by a blinded reader for presence and extent of overall PF (reticulation and honeycombing) at five anatomic levels. Overall extent of IPF was estimated to the nearest 5% as well as an evaluation of the ratios of IPF made up of reticulation and honeycombing. Overall grade of severity was dependent on the extent of reticulation and honeycombing.RESULTS:No control patient exhibited contrast enhancement on lung late-enhanced MRI. All IPF patients were identified with late-enhanced MRI. Mean signal intensity of the late-enhanced fibrotic lung was 31.8±10.6 vs. 10.5±1.6 for normal lung regions, P < 0.001, resulting in a percent elevation in signal intensity from PF of 204.8%±90.6 compared with the signal intensity of normal lung. The mean contrast-to-noise ratio was 22.8±10.7. Late-enhanced MRI correlated significantly with chest CT for the extent of PF (R=0.78, P = 0.001) but not for reticulation, honeycombing, or coarseness of reticulation or honeycombing.CONCLUSION:Tissue characterization of IPF is possible using inversion recovery sequence thoracic MRI.