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Abdominal DCE-MRI reconstruction with deformable motion correction for liver perfusion quantification.

Authors :
Johansson A
Balter JM
Cao Y
Source :
Medical physics [Med Phys] 2018 Oct; Vol. 45 (10), pp. 4529-4540. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Aug 31.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Purpose: Abdominal dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI suffers from motion-induced artifacts that can blur images and distort contrast-agent uptake curves. For liver perfusion analysis, image reconstruction with rigid-body motion correction (RMC) can restore distorted portal-venous input functions (PVIF) to higher peak amplitudes. However, RMC cannot correct for liver deformation during breathing. We present a reconstruction algorithm with deformable motion correction (DMC) that enables correction of breathing-induced deformation in the whole abdomen.<br />Methods: Raw data from a golden-angle stack-of-stars gradient-echo sequence were collected for 54 DCE-MRI examinations of 31 patients. For each examination, a respiratory motion signal was extracted from the data and used to reconstruct 21 breathing states from inhale to exhale. The states were aligned with deformable image registration to the end-exhale state. Resulting deformation fields were used to correct back-projection images before reconstruction with view sharing. Images with DMC were compared to uncorrected images and images with RMC.<br />Results: DMC significantly increased the PVIF peak amplitude compared to uncorrected images (P << 0.01, mean increase: 8%) but not compared to RMC. The increased PVIF peak amplitude significantly decreased estimated portal-venous perfusion in the liver (P << 0.01, mean decrease: 8 ml/(100 ml·min)). DMC also removed artifacts in perfusion maps at the liver edge and reduced blurring of liver tumors for some patients.<br />Conclusions: DCE-MRI reconstruction with DMC can restore motion-distorted uptake curves in the abdomen and remove motion artifacts from reconstructed images and parameter maps but does not significantly improve perfusion quantification in the liver compared to RMC.<br /> (© 2018 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2473-4209
Volume :
45
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Medical physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30098044
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mp.13118