Effect of intravascular contrast agent on diffusion and perfusion fraction coefficients in the peripheral zone and prostate cancer Journal Article


Authors: Mazaheri, Y.; Hötker, A. M.; Shukla-Dave, A.; Akin, O.; Hricak, H.
Article Title: Effect of intravascular contrast agent on diffusion and perfusion fraction coefficients in the peripheral zone and prostate cancer
Abstract: Purpose: To determine whether water diffusion and the perfusion fraction coefficients in prostate peripheral zone (PZ) and prostate cancer (PCa) are affected by intravenous contrast injection and explore the potential mechanism behind previously reported differences between pre- and post-contrast ADC values. Methods: Our institutional review board waived informed consent for this HIPAA-compliant, retrospective study, which included 32 patients (median age, 63 years; range, 47–77 years) with biopsy-proven, untreated PCa who underwent 3-Tesla MRI, including DW-MRI at b-values 0, 400, 700, 1000 s/mm2 before and after gadolinium injection. For regions of interest (ROIs) in presumed benign PZ and PZ PCa, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), perfusion fraction f, and diffusion coefficient D were estimated voxel-wise, and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise (CNR) were estimated. Pre- and post-contrast measurements were compared by Wilcoxon signed-rank test; P < 0.05 was considered significant. Results: In PZ, f (P = 0.002) was significantly higher on post-contrast imaging than on pre-contrast imaging, but ADC and D values did not change significantly (P = 0.562 and 0.295 respectively). In PCa, all parameters differed significantly between post-contrast and pre-contrast imaging (P < 0.0001 for ADC, P = 0.0084 for D, and P = 0.029 for f). On post-contrast imaging, SNR was not significantly different in PZ (P = 0.260) but was significantly lower in PCa (P < 0.0001); CNR did not change significantly (P = 0.059). Conclusion: After contrast injection, ADC and D declined significantly in PCa only, while f increased significantly in both PCa and PZ. Pre- and post-contrast diffusion parameters cannot be used interchangeably for diagnostic purposes that require quantitative diffusion estimates. © 2018
Keywords: signal-to-noise ratio; diffusion-weighted mri (dw-mri); prostate cancer (pca); apparent diffusion coefficient perfusion; contrast-to-noise; gadolinium-dtpa
Journal Title: Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Volume: 51
ISSN: 0730-725X
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 2018-09-01
Start Page: 120
End Page: 127
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.mri.2018.04.007
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 29678542
PMCID: PMC6638580
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 June 2018 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Hedvig Hricak
    419 Hricak
  2. Amita Dave
    137 Dave
  3. Oguz Akin
    264 Akin
  4. Andreas Markus Hoetker
    22 Hoetker