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Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study

BACKGROUND: T1 mapping is a robust and highly reproducible application to quantify myocardial relaxation of longitudinal magnetisation. Available T1 mapping methods are presently site and vendor specific, with variable accuracy and precision of T1 values between the systems and sequences. We assesse...

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Autores principales: Dabir, Darius, Child, Nicholas, Kalra, Ashwin, Rogers, Toby, Gebker, Rolf, Jabbour, Andrew, Plein, Sven, Yu, Chung-Yao, Otton, James, Kidambi, Ananth, McDiarmid, Adam, Broadbent, David, Higgins, David M, Schnackenburg, Bernhard, Foote, Lucy, Cummins, Ciara, Nagel, Eike, Puntmann, Valentina O
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4203908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25384607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-014-0069-x
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author Dabir, Darius
Child, Nicholas
Kalra, Ashwin
Rogers, Toby
Gebker, Rolf
Jabbour, Andrew
Plein, Sven
Yu, Chung-Yao
Otton, James
Kidambi, Ananth
McDiarmid, Adam
Broadbent, David
Higgins, David M
Schnackenburg, Bernhard
Foote, Lucy
Cummins, Ciara
Nagel, Eike
Puntmann, Valentina O
author_facet Dabir, Darius
Child, Nicholas
Kalra, Ashwin
Rogers, Toby
Gebker, Rolf
Jabbour, Andrew
Plein, Sven
Yu, Chung-Yao
Otton, James
Kidambi, Ananth
McDiarmid, Adam
Broadbent, David
Higgins, David M
Schnackenburg, Bernhard
Foote, Lucy
Cummins, Ciara
Nagel, Eike
Puntmann, Valentina O
author_sort Dabir, Darius
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: T1 mapping is a robust and highly reproducible application to quantify myocardial relaxation of longitudinal magnetisation. Available T1 mapping methods are presently site and vendor specific, with variable accuracy and precision of T1 values between the systems and sequences. We assessed the transferability of a T1 mapping method and determined the reference values of healthy human myocardium in a multicenter setting. METHODS: Healthy subjects (n = 102; mean age 41 years (range 17–83), male, n = 53 (52%)), with no previous medical history, and normotensive low risk subjects (n=113) referred for clinical cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) were examined. Further inclusion criteria for all were absence of regular medication and subsequently normal findings of routine CMR. All subjects underwent T1 mapping using a uniform imaging set-up (modified Look- Locker inversion recovery, MOLLI, using scheme 3(3)3(3)5)) on 1.5 Tesla (T) and 3 T Philips scanners. Native T1-maps were acquired in a single midventricular short axis slice and repeated 20 minutes following gadobutrol. Reference values were obtained for native T1 and gadolinium-based partition coefficients, λ and extracellular volume fraction (ECV) in a core lab using standardized postprocessing. RESULTS: In healthy controls, mean native T1 values were 950 ± 21 msec at 1.5 T and 1052 ± 23 at 3 T. λ and ECV values were 0.44 ± 0.06 and 0.25 ± 0.04 at 1.5 T, and 0.44 ± 0.07 and 0.26 ± 0.04 at 3 T, respectively. There were no significant differences between healthy controls and low risk subjects in routine CMR parameters and T1 values. The entire cohort showed no correlation between age, gender and native T1. Cross-center comparisons of mean values showed no significant difference for any of the T1 indices at any field strength. There were considerable regional differences in segmental T1 values. λ and ECV were found to be dose dependent. There was excellent inter- and intraobserver reproducibility for measurement of native septal T1. CONCLUSION: We show transferability for a unifying T1 mapping methodology in a multicenter setting. We provide reference ranges for T1 values in healthy human myocardium, which can be applied across participating sites. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12968-014-0069-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-42039082014-10-22 Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study Dabir, Darius Child, Nicholas Kalra, Ashwin Rogers, Toby Gebker, Rolf Jabbour, Andrew Plein, Sven Yu, Chung-Yao Otton, James Kidambi, Ananth McDiarmid, Adam Broadbent, David Higgins, David M Schnackenburg, Bernhard Foote, Lucy Cummins, Ciara Nagel, Eike Puntmann, Valentina O J Cardiovasc Magn Reson Research BACKGROUND: T1 mapping is a robust and highly reproducible application to quantify myocardial relaxation of longitudinal magnetisation. Available T1 mapping methods are presently site and vendor specific, with variable accuracy and precision of T1 values between the systems and sequences. We assessed the transferability of a T1 mapping method and determined the reference values of healthy human myocardium in a multicenter setting. METHODS: Healthy subjects (n = 102; mean age 41 years (range 17–83), male, n = 53 (52%)), with no previous medical history, and normotensive low risk subjects (n=113) referred for clinical cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) were examined. Further inclusion criteria for all were absence of regular medication and subsequently normal findings of routine CMR. All subjects underwent T1 mapping using a uniform imaging set-up (modified Look- Locker inversion recovery, MOLLI, using scheme 3(3)3(3)5)) on 1.5 Tesla (T) and 3 T Philips scanners. Native T1-maps were acquired in a single midventricular short axis slice and repeated 20 minutes following gadobutrol. Reference values were obtained for native T1 and gadolinium-based partition coefficients, λ and extracellular volume fraction (ECV) in a core lab using standardized postprocessing. RESULTS: In healthy controls, mean native T1 values were 950 ± 21 msec at 1.5 T and 1052 ± 23 at 3 T. λ and ECV values were 0.44 ± 0.06 and 0.25 ± 0.04 at 1.5 T, and 0.44 ± 0.07 and 0.26 ± 0.04 at 3 T, respectively. There were no significant differences between healthy controls and low risk subjects in routine CMR parameters and T1 values. The entire cohort showed no correlation between age, gender and native T1. Cross-center comparisons of mean values showed no significant difference for any of the T1 indices at any field strength. There were considerable regional differences in segmental T1 values. λ and ECV were found to be dose dependent. There was excellent inter- and intraobserver reproducibility for measurement of native septal T1. CONCLUSION: We show transferability for a unifying T1 mapping methodology in a multicenter setting. We provide reference ranges for T1 values in healthy human myocardium, which can be applied across participating sites. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12968-014-0069-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. BioMed Central 2014-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4203908/ /pubmed/25384607 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-014-0069-x Text en © Dabir et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2014
spellingShingle Research
Dabir, Darius
Child, Nicholas
Kalra, Ashwin
Rogers, Toby
Gebker, Rolf
Jabbour, Andrew
Plein, Sven
Yu, Chung-Yao
Otton, James
Kidambi, Ananth
McDiarmid, Adam
Broadbent, David
Higgins, David M
Schnackenburg, Bernhard
Foote, Lucy
Cummins, Ciara
Nagel, Eike
Puntmann, Valentina O
Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title_full Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title_fullStr Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title_full_unstemmed Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title_short Reference values for healthy human myocardium using a T1 mapping methodology: results from the International T1 Multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
title_sort reference values for healthy human myocardium using a t1 mapping methodology: results from the international t1 multicenter cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4203908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25384607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12968-014-0069-x
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