Validation of Highly Accelerated Wave-CAIPI SWI Compared with Conventional SWI and T2-Weighted Gradient Recalled-Echo for Routine Clinical Brain MRI at 3T

SWI is valuable for characterization of intracranial hemorrhage and mineralization but has long acquisition times. We compared a highly accelerated wave-controlled aliasing in parallel imaging (CAIPI) SWI sequence with 2 commonly used alternatives, standard SWI and T2*-weighted gradient recalled-ech...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of neuroradiology : AJNR 2019-12, Vol.40 (12), p.2073-2080
Hauptverfasser: Conklin, J, Longo, M G F, Cauley, S F, Setsompop, K, González, R G, Schaefer, P W, Kirsch, J E, Rapalino, O, Huang, S Y
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SWI is valuable for characterization of intracranial hemorrhage and mineralization but has long acquisition times. We compared a highly accelerated wave-controlled aliasing in parallel imaging (CAIPI) SWI sequence with 2 commonly used alternatives, standard SWI and T2*-weighted gradient recalled-echo (T2*W GRE), for routine clinical brain imaging at 3T. A total of 246 consecutive adult patients were prospectively evaluated using a conventional SWI or T2*W GRE sequence and an optimized wave-CAIPI SWI sequence, which was 3-5 times faster than the standard sequence. Two blinded radiologists scored each sequence for the presence of hemorrhage, the number of microhemorrhages, and severity of motion artifacts. Wave-CAIPI SWI was then evaluated in head-to-head comparison with the conventional sequences for visualization of pathology, artifacts, and overall diagnostic quality. Forced-choice comparisons were used for all scores. Wave-CAIPI SWI was tested for superiority relative to T2*W GRE and for noninferiority relative to standard SWI using a 15% noninferiority margin. Compared with T2*W GRE, wave-CAIPI SWI detected hemorrhages in more cases (
ISSN:0195-6108
1936-959X
DOI:10.3174/ajnr.A6295