1. Apparent diffusion coefficient is highly reproducible on preclinical imaging systems: Evidence from a seven-center multivendor study.
- Author
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Doblas S, Almeida GS, Blé FX, Garteiser P, Hoff BA, McIntyre DJ, Wachsmuth L, Chenevert TL, Faber C, Griffiths JR, Jacobs AH, Morris DM, O'Connor JP, Robinson SP, Van Beers BE, and Waterton JC
- Subjects
- Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Europe, Phantoms, Imaging veterinary, Phantoms, Imaging virology, United States, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging instrumentation, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging veterinary, Image Enhancement instrumentation, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted instrumentation
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate between-site agreement of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurements in preclinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems., Materials and Methods: A miniaturized thermally stable ice-water phantom was devised. ADC (mean and interquartile range) was measured over several days, on 4.7T, 7T, and 9.4T Bruker, Agilent, and Magnex small-animal MRI systems using a common protocol across seven sites. Day-to-day repeatability was expressed as percent variation of mean ADC between acquisitions. Cross-site reproducibility was expressed as 1.96 × standard deviation of percent deviation of ADC values., Results: ADC measurements were equivalent across all seven sites with a cross-site ADC reproducibility of 6.3%. Mean day-to-day repeatability of ADC measurements was 2.3%, and no site was identified as presenting different measurements than others (analysis of variance [ANOVA] P = 0.02, post-hoc test n.s.). Between-slice ADC variability was negligible and similar between sites (P = 0.15). Mean within-region-of-interest ADC variability was 5.5%, with one site presenting a significantly greater variation than the others (P = 0.0013)., Conclusion: Absolute ADC values in preclinical studies are comparable between sites and equipment, provided standardized protocols are employed., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
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