Advanced Myocardial MRI Tissue Characterization Combining Contrast Agent-Free T1-Rho Mapping With Fully Automated Analysis.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_20B0699709E6
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Advanced Myocardial MRI Tissue Characterization Combining Contrast Agent-Free T1-Rho Mapping With Fully Automated Analysis.
Journal
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging
Author(s)
de Villedon de Naide V., Narceau K., Ozenne V., Villegas-Martinez M., Nogues V., Brillet N., Huiyue Zhang J., Benlala I., Stuber M., Cochet H., Bustin A.
ISSN
1522-2586 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1053-1807
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
Myocardial T1-rho (T1ρ) mapping is a promising method for identifying and quantifying myocardial injuries without contrast agents, but its clinical use is hindered by the lack of dedicated analysis tools.
To explore the feasibility of clinically integrated artificial intelligence-driven analysis for efficient and automated myocardial T1ρ mapping.
Retrospective.
Five hundred seventy-three patients divided into a training (N = 500) and a test set (N = 73) including ischemic and nonischemic cases.
Single-shot bSSFP T1ρ mapping sequence at 1.5 T.
The automated process included: left ventricular (LV) wall segmentation, right ventricular insertion point detection and creation of a 16-segment model for segmental T1ρ value analysis. Two radiologists (20 and 7 years of MRI experience) provided ground truth annotations. Interobserver variability and segmentation quality were assessed using the Dice coefficient with manual segmentation as reference standard. Global and segmental T1ρ values were compared. Processing times were measured.
Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and Bland-Altman analysis (bias ±2SD); Paired Student's t-tests and one-way ANOVA. A P value <0.05 was considered significant.
The automated approach significantly reduced processing time (3 seconds vs. 1 minute 51 seconds ± 22 seconds). In the test set, automated LV wall segmentation closely matched manual results (Dice 81.9% ± 9.0) and closely aligned with interobserver segmentation (Dice 82.2% ± 6.5). Excellent ICCs were achieved on a patient basis (0.94 [95% CI: 0.91 to 0.96]) with bias of -0.93 cm <sup>2</sup> ± 6.60. There was no significant difference in global T1ρ values between manual (54.9 msec ± 4.6; 95% CI: 53.8 to 56.0 msec, range: 46.6-70.9 msec) and automated processing (55.4 msec ± 5.1; 95% CI: 54.2 to 56.6 msec; range: 46.4-75.1 msec; P = 0.099). The pipeline demonstrated a high level of agreement with manual-derived T1ρ values at the patient level (ICC = 0.85; bias +0.52 msec ± 5.18). No significant differences in myocardial T1ρ values were found between methods across the 16 segments (P = 0.75).
Automated myocardial T1ρ mapping shows promise for the rapid and noninvasive assessment of heart disease.
3 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 1.
Keywords
automated analysis, cardiac T1‐rho mapping, quantitative MRI
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
11/07/2024 13:36
Last modification date
12/07/2024 6:04
Usage data