Quantifying 3D MR fingerprinting (3D‐MRF) reproducibility across subjects, sessions, and scanners automatically using MNI atlases

Author:

Dupuis Andrew1ORCID,Chen Yong23ORCID,Hansen Michael4ORCID,Chow Kelvin5ORCID,Sun Jessie E. P.2ORCID,Badve Chaitra3ORCID,Ma Dan1ORCID,Griswold Mark A.2ORCID,Boyacioglu Rasim2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Department of Radiology Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

3. Department of Radiology University Hospitals Cleveland Ohio USA

4. Microsoft Research Redmond Washington USA

5. Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeQuantitative MRI techniques such as MR fingerprinting (MRF) promise more objective and comparable measurements of tissue properties at the point‐of‐care than weighted imaging. However, few direct cross‐modal comparisons of MRF's repeatability and reproducibility versus weighted acquisitions have been performed. This work proposes a novel fully automated pipeline for quantitatively comparing cross‐modal imaging performance in vivo via atlas‐based sampling.MethodsWe acquire whole‐brain 3D‐MRF, turbo spin echo, and MPRAGE sequences three times each on two scanners across 10 subjects, for a total of 60 multimodal datasets. The proposed automated registration and analysis pipeline uses linear and nonlinear registration to align all qualitative and quantitative DICOM stacks to Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) 152 space, then samples each dataset's native space through transformation inversion to compare performance within atlas regions across subjects, scanners, and repetitions.ResultsVoxel values within MRF‐derived maps were found to be more repeatable (σT1 = 1.90, σT2 = 3.20) across sessions than vendor‐reconstructed MPRAGE (σT1w = 6.04) or turbo spin echo (σT2w = 5.66) images. Additionally, MRF was found to be more reproducible across scanners (σT1 = 2.21, σT2 = 3.89) than either qualitative modality (σT1w = 7.84, σT2w = 7.76). Notably, differences between repeatability and reproducibility of in vivo MRF were insignificant, unlike the weighted images.ConclusionMRF data from many sessions and scanners can potentially be treated as a single dataset for harmonized analysis or longitudinal comparisons without the additional regularization steps needed for qualitative modalities.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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