Average arterial input function for quantitative dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of neck nodal metastases Journal Article


Authors: Shukla-Dave, A.; Lee, N.; Stambuk, H.; Wang, Y.; Huang, W.; Thaler, H. T.; Patel, S. G.; Shah, J. P.; Koutcher, J. A.
Article Title: Average arterial input function for quantitative dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of neck nodal metastases
Abstract: Background. The present study determines the feasibility of generating an average arterial input function (Avg-AIF) from a limited population of patients with neck nodal metastases to be used for pharmacokinetic modeling of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) data in clinical trials of larger populations. Methods. Twenty patients (mean age 50 years [range 27-77 years]) with neck nodal metastases underwent pretreatment DCE-MRI studies with a temporal resolution of 3.75 to 7.5 sec on a 1.5T clinical MRI scanner. Eleven individual AIFs (Ind-AIFs) met the criteria of expected enhancement pattern and were used to generate Avg-AIF. Tofts model was used to calculate pharmacokinetic DCE-MRI parameters. Bland-Altman plots and paired Student t-tests were used to describe significant differences between the pharmacokinetic parameters obtained from individual and average AIFs. Results. Ind-AIFs obtained from eleven patients were used to calculate the Avg-AIF. No overall significant difference (bias) was observed for the transfer constant (K<sup>trans</sup>) measured with Ind-AIFs compared to Avg-AIF (p = 0.20 for region-of-interest (ROI) analysis and p = 0.18 for histogram median analysis). Similarly, no overall significant difference was observed for interstitial fluid space volume fraction (ve) measured with Ind-AIFs compared to Avg-AIF (p = 0.48 for ROI analysis and p = 0.93 for histogram median analysis). However, the Bland-Altman plot suggests that as K<sup>trans</sup>increases, the Ind-AIF estimates tend to become proportionally higher than the Avg-AIF estimates. Conclusion. We found no statistically significant overall bias in K<sup>trans</sup>or ve estimates derived from Avg-AIF, generated from a limited population, as compared with Ind-AIFs. However, further study is needed to determine whether calibration is needed across the range of K<sup>trans</sup>. The Avg-AIF obtained from a limited population may be used for pharmacokinetic modeling of DCE-MRI data in larger population studies with neck nodal metastases. Further validation of the Avg-AIF approach with a larger population and in multiple regions is desirable.
Journal Title: BMC Medical Physics
Volume: 9
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1756-6649
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2009-01-01
Start Page: epub
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/1756-6649-9-4
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2679707
PUBMED: 19351382
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 1" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "Art. No.: 4" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Snehal G Patel
    412 Patel
  2. Hilda Stambuk
    48 Stambuk
  3. Nancy Y. Lee
    871 Lee
  4. Amita Dave
    137 Dave
  5. Jason A Koutcher
    278 Koutcher
  6. Jatin P Shah
    721 Shah
  7. Howard T Thaler
    245 Thaler
  8. Wei Huang
    24 Huang
  9. Ya Wang
    20 Wang