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Characterizing gradient echo signal decays in gynecologic cancers at 3T using a Gaussian augmentation of the monoexponential (GAME) model
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Characterizing gradient echo signal decays in gynecologic cancers at 3T using a Gaussian augmentation of the monoexponential (GAME) model

Pelin A Ciris, Mukund Balasubramanian, Antonio L Damato, Ravi T Seethamraju, Clare M Tempany-Afdhal, Robert V Mulkern and Akila N Viswanathan
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging, Vol.44(4), pp.1020-1030
10-2016
PMID: 26971387

Abstract

Adult Aged Biomarkers, Tumor - metabolism Computer Simulation Female Genital Neoplasms, Female - diagnostic imaging Genital Neoplasms, Female - metabolism Humans Image Enhancement - methods Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted - methods Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods Middle Aged Models, Statistical Normal Distribution Oxygen - metabolism Reproducibility of Results Sensitivity and Specificity Tumor Hypoxia
To assess whether R2* mapping with a standard Monoexponential (ME) or a Gaussian Augmentation of the Monoexponential (GAME) decay model better characterizes gradient-echo signal decays in gynecological cancers after external beam radiation therapy at 3T, and evaluate implications of modeling for noninvasive identification of intratumoral hypoxia. Multi-gradient-echo signals were acquired on 25 consecutive patients with gynecologic cancers and three healthy participants during inhalation of different oxygen concentrations at 3T. Data were fitted with both ME and GAME models. Models were compared using F-tests in tumors and muscles in patients, muscles, cervix, and uterus in healthy participants, and across oxygenation levels. GAME significantly improved fitting over ME (P < 0.05): Improvements with GAME covered 34% of tumor regions-of-interest on average, ranging from 6% (of a vaginal tumor) to 68% (of a cervical tumor) in individual tumors. Improvements with GAME were more prominent in areas that would be assumed hypoxic based on ME alone, reaching 90% as ME R2* approached 100 Hz. Gradient echo decay parameters at different oxygenation levels were not significantly different (P = 0.81). R2* may prove sensitive to hypoxia; however, inaccurate representations of underlying data may limit the success of quantitative assessments. Although the degree to which R2 or σ values correlate with hypoxia remains unknown, improved characterization with GAME increases the potential for determining any correlates of fit parameters with biomarkers, such as oxygenation status. J. MAGN. RESON. IMAGING 2016;44:1020-1030.
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5018920View
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