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Synthetic MRI of Preterm Infants at Term-Equivalent Age

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Subtitle:Evaluation of Diagnostic Image Quality and Automated Brain Volume Segmentation

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Neonatal MR imaging brain volume measurements can be used as biomarkers for long-term neurodevelopmental outcome, but quantitative volumetric MR imaging data are not usually available during routine radiologic evaluation. In the current study, the feasibility of automated quantitative brain volumetry and image reconstruction via synthetic MR imaging in very preterm infants was investigated.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Conventional and synthetic T1WIs and T2WIs from 111 very preterm infants were acquired at term-equivalent age. Overall image quality and artifacts of the conventional and synthetic images were rated on a 4-point scale. Legibility of anatomic structures and lesion conspicuity were assessed on a binary scale. Synthetic MR volumetry was compared with that generated via MANTiS, which is a neonatal tissue segmentation toolbox based on T2WI.

RESULTS: Image quality was good or excellent for most conventional and synthetic images. The 2 methods did not differ significantly regarding image quality or diagnostic performance for focal and cystic WM lesions. Dice similarity coefficients had excellent overlap for intracranial volume (97.3%) and brain parenchymal volume (94.3%), and moderate overlap for CSF (75.6%). Bland-Altman plots demonstrated a small systematic bias in all cases (1.7%-5.9%) CONCLUSIONS: Synthetic T1WI and T2WI sequences may complement or replace conventional images in neonatal imaging, and robust synthetic volumetric results are accessible from a clinical workstation in less than 1 minute. Via the above-described methods, volume assessments could be routinely used in daily clinical practice.

Journal: American Journal of Neuroradiology
ISSN: 0195-6108
Issue: 5
Volume: 41
Pages: 882-888
Publication year:2020
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.a6533
  • Scopus Id: 85084941531
  • WoS Id: 000536138400029
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-4548-9933/work/74203844
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-0511-0554/work/74203884
  • ORCID: /0000-0003-0822-1919/work/74204358
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-7452-5534/work/74204975
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-3601-3212/work/91494688
CSS-citation score:1
Accessibility:Open