Biomechanical Assessment of Liver Integrity: Prospective Evaluation of Mechanical Versus Acoustic MR Elastography

Author:

Koch Vitali1ORCID,Gotta Jennifer1,Chernyak Victoria2ORCID,Cengiz Duygu1,Torgashov Katerina1,Eichler Katrin1,Vilgrain Valérie34,Martin Simon S.1,Ziegengeist Nicole S.1,Konrad Paul1ORCID,Booz Christian1,Yel Ibrahim1,D'Angelo Tommaso1ORCID,Mahmoudi Scherwin1,Scholtz Jan‐Erik1,Bernatz Simon1,Alizadeh Leona S.1,Cimprich Marina1,Solim Levent A.1,Thalhammer Axel1,Gruber‐Rouh Tatjana1,Hammerstingl Renate M.1,Zeuzem Stefan5,Finkelmeier Fabian5,Pathil‐Warth Anita5,Onay Melis5,Kinzler Maximilian N.5,Darwish Omar6,Annio Giacomo7,Taylor Stuart A.8,Wild Peter9,Dahmer Iulia10,Herrmann Eva10,Almansour Haidara11,Vogl Thomas J.1,Gruenewald Leon D.1,Sinkus Ralph67

Affiliation:

1. Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology Goethe University Frankfurt, University Hospital Frankfurt am Main Germany

2. Department of Radiology Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York City New York USA

3. Laboratory of Imaging Biomarkers, Center for Research on Inflammation, UMR 1149 INSERM, Université de Paris Paris France

4. Department of Radiology Beaujon University Hospital Paris Nord, AP‐HP Clichy France

5. Department of Internal Medicine I Goethe University Frankfurt, University Hospital Frankfurt am Main Germany

6. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London London UK

7. Laboratory of Translational Vascular Sciences, U1148, INSERM, Université de Paris Paris France

8. Radiology Department University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London UK

9. Dr. Senckenberg Institute of Pathology, Goethe University Frankfurt, University Hospital Frankfurt am Main Germany

10. Institute of Biostatistics and Mathematical Modeling, Faculty of Medicine, Goethe University Frankfurt Frankfurt am Main Germany

11. Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology Eberhard‐Karls University Tuebingen Tuebingen Germany

Abstract

BackgroundMagnetic resonance elastography (MRE) can quantify tissue biomechanics noninvasively, including pathological hepatic states like metabolic dysfunction‐associated steatohepatitis.PurposeTo compare the performance of 2D/3D‐MRE using the gravitational (GT) transducer concept with the current commercial acoustic (AC) solution utilizing a 2D‐MRE approach. Additionally, quality index markers (QIs) were proposed to identify image pixels with sufficient quality for reliably estimating tissue biomechanics.Study TypeProspective.PopulationOne hundred seventy participants with suspected or confirmed liver disease (median age, 57 years [interquartile range (IQR), 46–65]; 66 females), and 11 healthy volunteers (median age, 31 years [IQR, 27–34]; 5 females).Field Strength/SequenceParticipants were scanned twice at 1.5 T and 60 Hz vibration frequency: first, using AC‐MRE (2D‐MRE, spin‐echo EPI sequence, 11 seconds breath‐hold), and second, using GT‐MRE (2D‐ and 3D‐MRE, gradient‐echo sequence, 14 seconds breath‐hold).AssessmentImage analysis was performed by four independent radiologists and one biomedical engineer. Additionally, superimposed analytic plane shear waves of known wavelength and attenuation at fixed shear modulus were used to propose pertinent QIs.Statistical TestsSpearman's correlation coefficient (r) was applied to assess the correlation between modalities. Interreader reproducibility was evaluated using Bland–Altman bias and reproducibility coefficients. P‐values <0.05 were considered statistically significant.ResultsLiver stiffness quantified via GT‐2D/3D correlated well with AC‐2D (r ≥ 0.89 [95% CI: 0.85–0.92]) and histopathological grading (r ≥ 0.84 [95% CI: 0.72–0.91]), demonstrating excellent agreement in Bland–Altman plots and between readers (κ ≥ 0.86 [95% CI: 0.81–0.91]). However, GT‐2D showed a bias in overestimating stiffness compared to GT‐3D. Proposed QIs enabled the identification of pixels deviating beyond 10% from true stiffness based on a combination of total wave amplitude, temporal sinusoidal nonlinearity, and wave signal‐to‐noise ratio for GT‐3D.ConclusionGT‐MRE represents an alternative to AC‐MRE for noninvasive liver tissue characterization. Both GT‐2D and 3D approaches correlated strongly with the established commercial approach, offering advanced capabilities in abdominal imaging compared to AC‐MRE.Evidence Level1Technical EfficacyStage 2

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Doktor Robert Pfleger-Stiftung

Publisher

Wiley

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