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MR multitasking‐based dynamic imaging for cerebrovascular evaluation (MT‐DICE): Simultaneous quantification of permeability and leakage‐insensitive perfusion by dynamic T1/T2* mapping

Published Web Location

https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.29431Creative Commons 'BY-NC-ND' version 4.0 license
Abstract

Purpose

To develop an MR multitasking-based dynamic imaging for cerebrovascular evaluation (MT-DICE) technique for simultaneous quantification of permeability and leakage-insensitive perfusion with a single-dose contrast injection.

Methods

MT-DICE builds on a saturation-recovery prepared multi-echo fast low-angle shot sequence. The k-space is randomly sampled for 7.6 min, with single-dose contrast agent injected 1.5 min into the scan. MR multitasking is used to model the data into six dimensions, including three spatial dimensions for whole-brain coverage, a saturation-recovery time dimension, and a TE dimension for dynamic T1$$ {\mathrm{T}}_1 $$ and T2*$$ {\mathrm{T}}_2^{\ast } $$ quantification, respectively, and a contrast dynamics dimension for capturing contrast kinetics. The derived pixel-wise T1/T2*$$ {\mathrm{T}}_1/{\mathrm{T}}_2^{\ast } $$ time series are converted into contrast concentration-time curves for calculation of kinetic metrics. The technique was assessed for its agreement with reference methods in T1$$ {\mathrm{T}}_1 $$ and T2*$$ {\mathrm{T}}_2^{\ast } $$ measurements in eight healthy subjects and, in three of them, inter-session repeatability of permeability and leakage-insensitive perfusion parameters. Its feasibility was also demonstrated in four patients with brain tumors.

Results

MT-DICE T1/T2*$$ {\mathrm{T}}_1/{\mathrm{T}}_2^{\ast } $$ values of normal gray matter and white matter were in excellent agreement with reference values (intraclass correlation coefficients = 0.860/0.962 for gray matter and 0.925/0.975 for white matter ). Both permeability and perfusion parameters demonstrated good to excellent intersession agreement with the lowest intraclass correlation coefficients at 0.694. Contrast kinetic parameters in all healthy subjects and patients were within the literature range.

Conclusion

Based on dynamic T1/T2*$$ {\mathrm{T}}_1/{\mathrm{T}}_2^{\ast } $$ mapping, MT-DICE allows for simultaneous quantification of permeability and leakage-insensitive perfusion metrics with a single-dose contrast injection.

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