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Fast and High-Resolution T2 Mapping Based on Echo Merging Plus k-t Undersampling with Reduced Refocusing Flip Angles (TEMPURA) as Methods for Human Renal MRI.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

PURPOSE: To develop a highly accelerated multi-echo spin-echo method, TEMPURA, for reducing the acquisition time and/or increasing spatial resolution for kidney T2 mapping. METHODS: TEMPURA merges several adjacent echoes into one k-space by either combining independent echoes or sharing one echo between k-spaces. The combined k-space is reconstructed based on compressed sensing theory. Reduced flip angles are used for the refocusing pulses, and the extended phase graph algorithm is used to correct the effects of indirect echoes. Two sequences were developed: a fast breath-hold sequence; and a high-resolution sequence. The performance was evaluated prospectively on a phantom, 16 healthy subjects, and two patients with different types of renal tumors. RESULTS: The fast TEMPURA method reduced the acquisition time from 3-5 min to one breath-hold (18 s). Phantom measurements showed that fast TEMPURA had a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 8.2%, which was comparable to a standardized respiratory-triggered sequence (7.4%), but much lower than a sequence accelerated by purely k-t undersampling (21.8%). High-resolution TEMPURA reduced the in-plane voxel size from 3 × 3 to 1 × 1 mm2, resulting in improved visualization of the detailed anatomical structure. In vivo T2 measurements demonstrated good agreement (fast: MAPE = 1.3%-2.5%; high-resolution: MAPE = 2.8%-3.3%) and high correlation coefficients (fast: R = 0.85-0.98; high-resolution: 0.82-0.96) with the standardized method, outperforming k-t undersampling alone (MAPE = 3.3-4.5%, R = 0.57-0.59). CONCLUSION: TEMPURA provides fast and high-resolution renal T2 measurements. It has the potential to improve clinical throughput and delineate intratumoral heterogeneity and tissue habitats at unprecedented spatial resolution.

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Publication status: Published


Funder: Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain‐Inspired Technology; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100020441


Funder: Addenbrooke's Charitable Trust, Cambridge University Hospitals; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002927


Funder: CRUK National Cancer Imaging Translational Accelerator award (NCITA)


Funder: National Institute for Health and Care Research; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000272


Funder: Cambridge Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre


Funder: CRUK Cambridge Centre

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Wiley

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MR/R02264X/1)
Cancer Research UK (C96/A25177)
Cancer Research UK (C12912/A27150)
Cancer Research UK (C19212/A29082)
Cancer Research UK (EDDPMA-May22\100068)
Cancer Research UK (C197/A28667)