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Oxygen-Enhanced MRI, Thin-Section MDCT, and Perfusion SPECT/CT: Comparison of Clinical Implications to Patient Care for Lung Volume Reduction Surgery

Authors :
Sumiaki Matsumoto
Mizuho Nishio
Takeshi Yoshikawa
Kazuro Sugimura
Yoshiharu Ohno
Daisuke Takenaka
Hisanobu Koyama
Source :
American Journal of Roentgenology. 199:794-802
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Roentgen Ray Society, 2012.

Abstract

The purpose of our study was to prospectively and directly compare capability of O2-enhanced MRI, MDCT, and perfusion SPECT/CT to clinical outcome measurements in candidates for lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS).Twenty-five consecutive candidates for LVRS (20 men and five women; age range, 45-76 years) underwent MDCT, O2-enhanced MRI, and perfusion SPECT/CT before and after LVRS. Clinical outcomes for each candidate were evaluated in terms of differences between pre- and postoperative percentage forced expiratory volume in 1 second (%FEV1), Pao2, and 6-minute walking distance. Quantitatively assessed upper/lower lung ratios on O2-enhanced MRI, MDCT, and SPECT/CT were calculated from regional relative enhancement ratios, functional lung volumes, and radioisotope uptakes between upper and lower lungs. Qualitatively assessed upper/lower lung ratios on O2-enhanced MRI, MDCT, and SPECT/CT were estimated using visual scoring systems. To evaluate the correlation for individual upper/lower lung ratios and clinical outcomes, all upper/lower lung ratios were correlated with clinical outcomes. Improvements in mean relative enhancement ratio were directly correlated with clinical outcomes to assess the capability of O2-enhanced MRI to assess therapeutic effect.All quantitatively (-0.63≤r≤-0.47, p0.05) and qualitatively (0.41≤r≤0.57, p0.05) assessed upper/lower lung ratios showed moderate and statistically significant correlation with clinical outcomes, and improvement in mean relative enhancement ratio showed moderate or good correlation, both statistically significant (-0.44≤r≤0.71, p0.05).O2-enhanced MRI shows potential for more accurate evaluation of postoperative clinical outcome for LVRS candidates than SPECT/CT and can be considered at least as reliable as MDCT.

Details

ISSN :
15463141 and 0361803X
Volume :
199
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Roentgenology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5cc06f3eabce114506f0031daf19a84d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2214/ajr.11.8250