European Radiology Experimental (Jul 2023)

Optimized flow compensation for contrast-enhanced T1-weighted Wave-CAIPI 3D MPRAGE imaging of the brain

  • Azadeh Tabari,
  • Min Lang,
  • Komal Awan,
  • Wei Liu,
  • Bryan Clifford,
  • Wei-Ching Lo,
  • Daniel Nicolas Splitthoff,
  • Stephen Cauley,
  • Otto Rapalino,
  • Pamela Schaefer,
  • Susie Y. Huang,
  • John Conklin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41747-023-00351-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Flow-related artifacts have been observed in highly accelerated T1-weighted contrast-enhanced wave-controlled aliasing in parallel imaging (CAIPI) magnetization-prepared rapid gradient-echo (MPRAGE) imaging and can lead to diagnostic uncertainty. We developed an optimized flow-mitigated Wave-CAIPI MPRAGE acquisition protocol to reduce these artifacts through testing in a custom-built flow phantom. In the phantom experiment, maximal flow artifact reduction was achieved with the combination of flow compensation gradients and radial reordered k-space acquisition and was included in the optimized sequence. Clinical evaluation of the optimized MPRAGE sequence was performed in 64 adult patients, who all underwent contrast-enhanced Wave-CAIPI MPRAGE imaging without flow-compensation and with optimized flow-compensation parameters. All images were evaluated for the presence of flow-related artifacts, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), gray-white matter contrast, enhancing lesion contrast, and image sharpness on a 3-point Likert scale. In the 64 cases, the optimized flow mitigation protocol reduced flow-related artifacts in 89% and 94% of the cases for raters 1 and 2, respectively. SNR, gray-white matter contrast, enhancing lesion contrast, and image sharpness were rated as equivalent for standard and flow-mitigated Wave-CAIPI MPRAGE in all subjects. The optimized flow mitigation protocol successfully reduced the presence of flow-related artifacts in the majority of cases. Relevance statement As accelerated MRI using novel encoding schemes become increasingly adopted in clinical practice, our work highlights the need to recognize and develop strategies to minimize the presence of unexpected artifacts and reduction in image quality as potential compromises to achieving short scan times. Key points • Flow-mitigation technique led to an 89–94% decrease in flow-related artifacts. • Image quality, signal-to-noise ratio, enhancing lesion conspicuity, and image sharpness were preserved with the flow mitigation technique. • Flow mitigation reduced diagnostic uncertainty in cases where flow-related artifacts mimicked enhancing lesions. Graphical Abstract

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