Diffusion-weighted MR imaging of the normal pancreas: Reproducibility and variations of apparent diffusion coefficient measurement at 1.5- and 3.0-Tesla - 30/03/13
Abstract |
Purpose |
To evaluate reproducibility and variations in apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) measurement in normal pancreatic parenchyma at 1.5- and 3.0-Tesla and determine if differences may exist between the four pancreatic segments.
Materials and methods |
Diffusion-weighted MR imaging of the pancreas was performed at 1.5-Tesla in 20 patients and at 3.0-Tesla in other 20 patients strictly matched for gender and age using the same b values (0, 400 and 800s/mm2). Two independent observers placed regions of interest within the four pancreatic segments to measure ADC at both fields. Intra- and inter-observer agreement in ADC measurement was assessed using Bland-Altman analysis and comparison between ADC values obtained at both fields using non-parametrical tests.
Results |
There were no significant differences in ADC between repeated measurements and between ADC obtained at 1.5-Tesla and those at 3.0-Tesla. The 95% limits of intra-observer agreement between ADC were 2.3%–22.7% at 1.5-Tesla and 1%–24.2% at 3.0-Tesla and those for inter-observer agreement between 1.9%–14% at 1.5-Tesla and 8%–25% at 3.0-Tesla. ADC values were similar in all pancreatic segments at 3.0-T whereas the tail had lower ADC at 1.5-Tesla.
Conclusion |
ADC measurement conveys high degrees of intra- and inter-observer reproducibility. ADC have homogeneous distribution among the four pancreatic segments at 3.0-Tesla.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Diffusion-weighted MRI, MR imaging, Apparent diffusion coefficient, Pancreas, Reproducibility assessment
Plan
Vol 94 - N° 4
P. 418-427 - avril 2013 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.