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Repeatability and reproducibility of ADC measurements: a prospective multicenter whole-body-MRI study.

Authors :
Michoux NF
Ceranka JW
Vandemeulebroucke J
Peeters F
Lu P
Absil J
Triqueneaux P
Liu Y
Collette L
Willekens I
Brussaard C
Debeir O
Hahn S
Raeymaekers H
de Mey J
Metens T
Lecouvet FE
Source :
European radiology [Eur Radiol] 2021 Jul; Vol. 31 (7), pp. 4514-4527. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jan 06.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives: Multicenter oncology trials increasingly include MRI examinations with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) quantification for lesion characterization and follow-up. However, the repeatability and reproducibility (R&R) limits above which a true change in ADC can be considered relevant are poorly defined. This study assessed these limits in a standardized whole-body (WB)-MRI protocol.<br />Methods: A prospective, multicenter study was performed at three centers equipped with the same 3.0-T scanners to test a WB-MRI protocol including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Eight healthy volunteers per center were enrolled to undergo test and retest examinations in the same center and a third examination in another center. ADC variability was assessed in multiple organs by two readers using two-way mixed ANOVA, Bland-Altman plots, coefficient of variation (CoV), and the upper limit of the 95% CI on repeatability (RC) and reproducibility (RDC) coefficients.<br />Results: CoV of ADC was not influenced by other factors (center, reader) than the organ. Based on the upper limit of the 95% CI on RC and RDC (from both readers), a change in ADC in an individual patient must be superior to 12% (cerebrum white matter), 16% (paraspinal muscle), 22% (renal cortex), 26% (central and peripheral zones of the prostate), 29% (renal medulla), 35% (liver), 45% (spleen), 50% (posterior iliac crest), 66% (L5 vertebra), 68% (femur), and 94% (acetabulum) to be significant.<br />Conclusions: This study proposes R&R limits above which ADC changes can be considered as a reliable quantitative endpoint to assess disease or treatment-related changes in the tissue microstructure in the setting of multicenter WB-MRI trials.<br />Key Points: • The present study showed the range of R&R of ADC in WB-MRI that may be achieved in a multicenter framework when a standardized protocol is deployed. • R&R was not influenced by the site of acquisition of DW images. • Clinically significant changes in ADC measured in a multicenter WB-MRI protocol performed with the same type of MRI scanner must be superior to 12% (cerebrum white matter), 16% (paraspinal muscle), 22% (renal cortex), 26% (central zone and peripheral zone of prostate), 29% (renal medulla), 35% (liver), 45% (spleen), 50% (posterior iliac crest), 66% (L5 vertebra), 68% (femur), and 94% (acetabulum) to be detected with a 95% confidence level.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-1084
Volume :
31
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33409773
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-020-07522-0