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Accuracy and the effect of possible subject-based confounders of magnitude-based MRI for estimating hepatic proton density fat fraction in adults, using MR spectroscopy as reference

Authors :
Rohit Loomba
Alexandra Schlein
Tanya Wolfson
Ajinkya Desai
Claude B. Sirlin
Kevin A Zand
Anthony Gamst
Elhamy Heba
Gavin Hamilton
Michael S. Middleton
Source :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 43:398-406
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Author(s): Heba, Elhamy R; Desai, Ajinkya; Zand, Kevin A; Hamilton, Gavin; Wolfson, Tanya; Schlein, Alexandra N; Gamst, Anthony; Loomba, Rohit; Sirlin, Claude B; Middleton, Michael S | Abstract: PurposeTo determine the accuracy and the effect of possible subject-based confounders of magnitude-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for estimating hepatic proton density fat fraction (PDFF) for different numbers of echoes in adults with known or suspected nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, using MR spectroscopy (MRS) as a reference.Materials and methodsIn this retrospective analysis of 506 adults, hepatic PDFF was estimated by unenhanced 3.0T MRI, using right-lobe MRS as reference. Regions of interest placed on source images and on six-echo parametric PDFF maps were colocalized to MRS voxel location. Accuracy using different numbers of echoes was assessed by regression and Bland-Altman analysis; slope, intercept, average bias, and R2 were calculated. The effect of age, sex, and body mass index (BMI) on hepatic PDFF accuracy was investigated using multivariate linear regression analyses.ResultsMRI closely agreed with MRS for all tested methods. For three- to six-echo methods, slope, regression intercept, average bias, and R2 were 1.01-0.99, 0.11-0.62%, 0.24-0.56%, and 0.981-0.982, respectively. Slope was closest to unity for the five-echo method. The two-echo method was least accurate, underestimating PDFF by an average of 2.93%, compared to an average of 0.23-0.69% for the other methods. Statistically significant but clinically nonmeaningful effects on PDFF error were found for subject BMI (P range: 0.0016 to 0.0783), male sex (P range: 0.015 to 0.037), and no statistically significant effect was found for subject age (P range: 0.18-0.24).ConclusionHepatic magnitude-based MRI PDFF estimates using three, four, five, and six echoes, and six-echo parametric maps are accurate compared to reference MRS values, and that accuracy is not meaningfully confounded by age, sex, or BMI.

Details

ISSN :
10531807
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........776c8d87f54d0fbf84abecc766cdd0e5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.25006