%0 Journal Article %T Non-contrast magnetic resonance evaluation of active multiple sclerosis lesions: Emerging role of quantitative synthetic magnetic resonance imaging. %A Girdhar S %A Nair SS %A Thomas B %A Kesavadas C %J Neuroradiol J %V 0 %N 0 %D 2024 Jul 29 %M 39075947 暂无%R 10.1177/19714009241269541 %X OBJECTIVE: The current study aims to explore the utility of novel synthetic MRI-derived quantitative parameters including myelin-correlated volume (MyC) in identifying active MS lesions without injecting gadolinium contrast.
METHODS: 43 MS patients underwent institutional MS protocol including 3D FLAIR and post-contrast 3D T1VIBE sequence on a 1.5 T MR Scanner in addition to synthetic MRI sequence. MS plaques were categorised into enhancing (C) and non-enhancing (N) lesions. They were also sub-categorised based on location into periventricular WM lesions (P), deep WM lesions (D), infratentorial lesions (I) and cortical-juxtacortical (C) lesions. ROIs were placed on Synthetic FLAIR images in MS lesions and quantitative parameters of R1, R2, PD and myelin-correlated volume (MyC) obtained. Sensitivity and specificity for various cut-off values to differentiate enhancing from non-enhancing multiple sclerosis lesions were calculated by performing ROC curve analysis and logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS: Contrast enhancing lesions demonstrated significantly higher mean R1, R2 values and lower mean PD values in comparison to non-enhancing lesions (p < 0.05) but with limited specificity. Region-wise analysis revealed high AUC values for mean R1 and R2 at cortical-juxtacortical lesions (p < 0.001) followed by periventricular lesions (p < 0.003) for differentiating enhancing from non-enhancing lesions with no significant contribution from MyC and PD values.
CONCLUSIONS: Synthetic MRI-derived quantitative parameters of mean R1, R2, MyC and PD hold value in differentiating contrast enhancing and non-enhancing MS lesions without administering gadolinium-based contrast agent. However, the current study did not achieve significant specificity for establishing the same.