1. Test-retest reliability of arterial spin labelling for cerebral blood flow in older adults with small vessel disease
- Author
-
Lauren R. Binnie, Mathilde M. H. Pauls, Philip Benjamin, Mohani-Preet K. Dhillon, Shai Betteridge, Brian Clarke, Rita Ghatala, Fearghal A. H. Hainsworth, Franklyn A. Howe, Usman Khan, Christina Kruuse, Jeremy B. Madigan, Barry Moynihan, Bhavini Patel, Anthony C. Pereira, Egill Rostrup, Anan B. Y. Shtaya, Catherine A. Spilling, Sarah Trippier, Rebecca Williams, Jeremy D. Isaacs, Thomas R. Barrick, and Atticus H. Hainsworth
- Subjects
Male ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,General Neuroscience ,Leukoaraiosis ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Vascular aging ,Cerebral blood flow ,Arterial spin labelling ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,White Matter ,Small vessel disease ,White matter lesions ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Humans ,Female ,Spin Labels ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Aged - Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is common in older people and is associated with lacunar stroke, white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and vascular cognitive impairment. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is reduced in SVD, particularly within white matter.Here we quantified test–retest reliability in CBF measurements using pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling (pCASL) in older adults with clinical and radiological evidence of SVD (N=54, mean (SD): 66.9 (8.7) years, 15 females/39 males). We generated whole-brain CBF maps on two visits at least 7 days apart (mean (SD): 20 (19), range 7-117 days).Test–retest reliability for CBF was high in all tissue types, with intra-class correlation coefficient [95%CI]: 0.758 [0.616, 0.852] for whole brain, 0.842 [0.743, 0.905] for total grey matter, 0.771 [0.636, 0.861] for deep grey matter (caudate-putamen and thalamus), 0.872 [0.790, 0.923] for normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and 0.780 [0.650, 0.866] for WMH (all pWe conclude that pCASL has high test–retest reliability as a quantitative measure of CBF in older adults with SVD. These findings support the use of pCASL in routine clinical imaging and as a clinical trial endpoint.All data come from the PASTIS trial, prospectively registered at: https://eudract.ema.europa.eu (2015-001235-20, registered 13/05/2015), http://www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02450253, registered 21/05/2015).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF