Efficacy of Whole-Blood Model of Gadolinium-Based Contrast Agent Relaxivity in Predicting Vascular MR Signal Intensity In Vivo
Overview
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Background: Previous in vitro studies have described sub-linear longitudinal and heightened transverse HO relaxivities of gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs) in blood due to their extracellular nature. However, in vivo validation is lacking.
Purpose: Validate theory describing blood behavior of R and R* in an animal model.
Study Type: Prospective, animal.
Animal Model: Seven swine (54-65 kg).
Field Strength/sequence: 1.5 T; time-resolved 3D spoiled gradient-recalled echo (SPGR) and quantitative Look-Locker and multi-echo fast field echo sequences.
Assessment: Seven swine were each injected three times with 0.1 mmol/kg intravenous doses of one of three GBCAs: gadoteridol, gadobutrol, and gadobenate dimeglumine. Injections were randomized for rate (1, 2, and 3 mL/s) and order, during which time-resolved aortic 3D SPGR imaging was performed concurrently with aortic blood sampling via an indwelling catheter. Time-varying [GBCA] was measured by mass spectrometry of sampled blood. Predicted signal intensity (SI) was determined from a model incorporating sub-linear R and R* effects (whole-blood model) and simpler models incorporating linear R, with and without R* effects. Predicted SIs were compared to measured aortic SI.
Statistical Tests: Linear correlation (coefficient of determination, R) and mean errors were compared across the SI prediction models.
Results: There was an excellent correlation between predicted and measured SI across all injections and swine when accounting for the non-linear dependence of R and high blood R* (regression slopes 0.91-1.04, R ≥ 0.91). Simplified models (linear R with and without R* effects) showed poorer correlation (slopes 0.67-0.85 and 0.54-0.64 respectively, both R ≥ 0.89) and higher averaged mean absolute and mean square errors (128.4 and 177.4 vs. 42.0, respectively, and 5506 and 11,419 vs. 699, respectively).
Data Conclusion: Incorporating sub-linear R and high first-pass R* effects in arterial blood models allows accurate SPGR SI prediction in an in vivo animal model, and might be utilized when modeling MR blood SI.
Level Of Evidence: 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 1.
Li C, Shan S, Chen L, Afshari M, Wang H, Lu K Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024; 11(39):e2405719.
PMID: 39164979 PMC: 11497041. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202405719.