1. Estimating breast tumor blood flow during neoadjuvant chemotherapy using interleaved high temporal and high spatial resolution MRI
- Author
-
Leonidas, Georgiou, Nisha, Sharma, David A, Broadbent, Daniel J, Wilson, Barbara J, Dall, Anmol, Gangi, and David L, Buckley
- Subjects
Adult ,Contrast Media ,Breast Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Signal-To-Noise Ratio ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Article ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Feasibility Studies ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Female ,Cyclophosphamide ,Epirubicin - Abstract
To evaluate an interleaved MRI sampling strategy that acquires both high temporal resolution (HTR) dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) data for quantifying breast tumor blood flow (TBF) and high spatial resolution (HSR) DCE data for clinical reporting, following a single standard injection of contrast agent.A simulation study was used to evaluate the performance of the interleaved technique under different conditions. In a prospective clinical study, 18 patients with primary breast cancer, who were due to undergo neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), were examined using interleaved HTR and HSR DCE-MRI at 1.5 Tesla. Tumor regions of interest were analyzed with a two-compartment tracer kinetic model. Paired parameters (n = 10) from the data acquired before and post-cycle 2 of NACT were compared using the nonparametric Wilcoxon signed-rank test.Simulations demonstrated that TBF was reliably estimated using the proposed strategy. The region of interest analysis revealed significant changes in TBF (0.81-0.43 mL/min/mL; P = 0.002) following two cycles of NACT. The HSR data were reported in the normal way and enabled the assessment of tumor volume, which decreased by 53% following NACT (P = 0.065).TBF can be measured reliably using the proposed strategy without compromising a standard clinical protocol. Furthermore, in our feasibility study, TBF decreased significantly following NACT, whereas capillary permeability surface-area product did not. Magn Reson Med 79:317-326, 2018. © 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
- Published
- 2016