作者
Ahmed E. Othman,F. Falkner,Jakob Weiß,Stephan Kruck,Robert Grimm,Petros Martirosian,Konstantin Nikolaou,Mike Notohamiprodjo
摘要
The aim of this study was to assess the effect of temporal resolution on semiquantitative and pharmacokinetic parameters from dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and their diagnostic accuracy regarding the detection of potentially malignant prostate lesions.Sixty consecutive male patients (age, 64.5 ± 7.0 years) with clinically suspected prostate cancer were included. All patients underwent multiparametric MRI of the prostate (T2-weighted, diffusion-weighted imaging, and DCE-MRI) on a 3 T MRI scanner. Patients were divided into 2 groups depending on Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) score of the detected lesions (group A: PI-RADS score ≤3, n = 30; group B: PI-RADS score >3, n = 30). In all patients, DCE-MRI was performed using a CAIPIRINHA-Dixon-TWIST Volume-Interpolated Breath-Hold Examination sequence (spatial resolution, 3 × 1.2 × 1.2 mm; temporal resolution, 5 seconds; total sampling duration, 4:10 minutes [250 seconds]) with body weight-adapted administration of contrast agent (gadobutrol, Gadovist; Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). Six DCE-MRI series with different temporal resolutions ranging from 5 to 30 seconds per time point were retrospectively generated from the original data sets. Semiquantitative parameters (ie, wash-in, wash-out, and time-to-peak [TTP]) as well as pharmacokinetic parameters (ie, Ktrans, Kep, and ve) were calculated for the different temporal resolutions. Both lesion groups and all 6 DCE-MRI series were compared regarding semiquantitative and pharmacokinetic parameters. Diagnostic accuracy for the detection of potentially malignant lesions was calculated for all 6 series using ROC analysis.A significant effect of temporal resolution was found on wash-in (P < 0.001). Series with temporal resolution lower than 10 s/time point showed significantly lower wash-in values with more pronounced effects in group B compared with group A. For 30-second series, the differences between both groups diminished reaching insignificant levels (P = 0.052), resulting in a significant decrease of the diagnostic accuracy of wash-in (area under the curve, 0.609; 95% confidence interval, 0.451-0.766; P < 0.015). No significant effects were detected on wash-out. For TTP, a significant effect of temporal resolution was detected (P < 0.001) with significantly increasing TTP levels for all down-sampled series compared with the original 5-second series. These effects did not impact the diagnostic accuracy of TTP. No significant effects of temporal resolution were detected on pharmacokinetic parameters (P < 0.112).In DCE-MRI of the prostate, temporal resolution affects the diagnostic performance of semiquantitative parameters. For a sufficient detection of malignant prostate lesions on DCE-MRI, a temporal resolution of at least 10 s/time point or higher is recommended.