Detecting small pulmonary nodules with spiral ultrashort echo time sequences in 1.5  T MRI

This study investigated ultrashort echo time (UTE) sequences in 1.5  T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for small lung nodule detection.Materials and methodsA total of 120 patients with 165 small lung nodules before video-associated thoracoscopic resection were enrolled. MRI sequences included conventional volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE, scan time 16  s), spiral UTE (TE 0.05 ms) with free-breathing (scan time 3.5–5 min), and breath-hold sequences (scan time 20 s). Chest CT provided a standard reference for nodule size and morphology. Nodule detection sensitivity was evaluated on a lobe-by-lobe basis.ResultsThe nodule detection rate was significantly higher in spiral UTE free-breathing (>  78%,p <  0.05) and breath-hold sequences (>  75%,p <  0.05) compared with conventional VIBE (>  55%), reaching 100% when nodule size was >  16 mm, and reaching 95% when nodules were in solid morphology, regardless of size. The inter-sequence reliability between free-breathing and breath-hold spiral UTE was good (κ >  0.80). Inter-reader agreement was also high (κ >  0.77) for spiral UTE sequences. Nodule size measurements were consistent between CT and spiral UTE MRI, with a minimal bias up to 0.2 mm.DiscussionSpiral UTE sequences detect small lung nodules that warrant surgery, offers realistic scan times for clinical work, and could be implemented as part of routine lung MRI.
Source: Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology and Medicine - Category: Materials Science Source Type: research