Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca)
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- Comparison of myocardial blood flow quantification models for double ECG gating arterial spin labeling MRI: reproducibility assessment(Wiley Periodicals LLC, 2024) Solis-Barquero, S.M. (Sergio M.); Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Ezponda, A. (Ana)Background: Arterial spin labeling (ASL) allows non-invasive quantification of myocardial blood flow (MBF). Double-ECG gating (DG) ASL is more robust to heart rate variability than single-ECG gating (SG), but its reproducibility requires further investigation. Moreover, the existence of multiple quantification models hinders its application. Frequency-offset-corrected-inversion (FOCI) pulses provide sharper edge profiles than hyperbolic-secant (HS), which could benefit myocardial ASL. Purpose: To assess the performance of MBF quantification models for DG compared to SG ASL, to evaluate their reproducibility and to compare the effects of HS and FOCI pulses. Study Type: Prospective. Subjects: Sixteen subjects (27 8 years). Field Strength/Sequence: 1.5 T/DG and SG flow-sensitive alternating inversion recovery ASL. Assessment: Three models for DG MBF quantification were compared using Monte Carlo simulations and in vivo experiments. Two models used a fitting approach (one using only a single label and control image pair per fit, the other using all available image pairs), while the third model used a T1 correction approach. Slice profile simulations were conducted for HS and FOCI pulses with varying B0 and B1. Temporal signal-to-noise ratio (tSNR) was computed for different acquisition/quantification strategies and inversion pulses. The number of images that minimized MBF error was investigated in the model with highest tSNR. Intra and intersession reproducibility were assessed in 10 subjects. Statistical Tests: Within-subject coefficient of variation, analysis of variance. P-value <0.05 was considered significant. Results: MBF was not different across acquisition/quantification strategies (P = 0.27) nor pulses (P = 0.9). DG MBF quantification models exhibited significantly higher tSNR and superior reproducibility, particularly for the fitting model using multiple images (tSNR was 3.46 2.18 in vivo and 3.32 1.16 in simulations, respectively; wsCV = 16%). Reducing the number of ASL pairs to 13/15 did not increase MBF error (minimum = 0.22 mL/g/min). Data Conclusion: Reproducibility of MBF was better for DG than SG acquisitions, especially when employing a fitting model. Level of Evidence: 2 Technical Efficacy: Stage 1
- Multiparametric renal magnetic resonance imaging: A reproducibility study in renal allografts with stable function(Wiley, 2023) Martín-Moreno, P.L. (Paloma L.); Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Cano, D. (David); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Garcia-Fernandez, N. (Nuria); Villanueva, A. (Arantxa)Monitoring renal allograft function after transplantation is key for the early detection of allograft impairment, which in turn can contribute to preventing the loss of the allograft. Multiparametric renal MRI (mpMRI) is a promising noninvasive technique to assess and characterize renal physiopathology; however, few studies have employed mpMRI in renal allografts with stable function (maintained function over a long time period). The purposes of the current study were to evaluate the reproducibility of mpMRI in transplant patients and to characterize normal values of the measured parameters, and to estimate the labeling efficiency of Pseudo-Continuous Arterial Spin Labeling (PCASL) in the infrarenal aorta using numerical simulations considering experimental measurements of aortic blood flow profiles. The subjects were 20 transplant patients with stable kidney function, maintained over 1 year. The MRI protocol consisted of PCASL, intravoxel incoherent motion, and T1 inversion recovery. Phase contrast was used to measure aortic blood flow. Renal blood flow (RBF), diffusion coefficient (D), pseudo-diffusion coefficient (D*), flowing fraction ( f ), and T1 maps were calculated and mean values were measured in the cortex and medulla. The labeling efficiency of PCASL was estimated from simulation of Bloch equations. Reproducibility was assessed with the within-subject coefficient of variation, intraclass correlation coefficient, and Bland-Altman analysis. Correlations were evaluated using the Pearson correlation coefficient. The significance level was p less than 0.05. Cortical reproducibility was very good for T1, D, and RBF, moderate for f , and low for D*, while medullary reproducibility was good for T1 and D. Significant correlations in the cortex between RBF and f (r = 0.66), RBF and eGFR (r = 0.64), and D* and eGFR (r = -0.57) were found. Normal values of the measured parameters employing the mpMRI protocol in kidney transplant patients with stable function were characterized and the results showed good reproducibility of the techniques.
- Perspectives on the role of magnetic resonance imaging (Mri) for noninvasive evaluation of diabetic kidney disease(2021) Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Mora-Gutiérrez, J.M. (José María); Garcia-Fernandez, N. (Nuria)Renal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques are currently in vogue, as they provide in vivo information on renal volume, function, metabolism, perfusion, oxygenation, and microstructural alterations, without the need for exogenous contrast media. New imaging biomarkers can be identified using these tools, which represent a major advance in the understanding and study of the different pathologies affecting the kidney. Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is one of the most important diseases worldwide due to its high prevalence and impact on public health. However, its multifactorial etiology poses a challenge for both basic and clinical research. Therefore, the use of novel renal MRI techniques is an attractive step forward in the comprehension of DKD, both in its pathogenesis and in its detection and surveillance in the clinical practice. This review article outlines the most promising MRI techniques in the study of DKD, with the purpose of stimulating their clinical translation as possible tools for the diagnosis, follow-up, and monitoring of the clinical impacts of new DKD treatments.
- A deep learning image analysis method for renal perfusion estimation in pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling MRI(Elsevier, 2023) Martín-Moreno, P.L. (Paloma L.); Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Oyarzun-Domeño, A. (Anne); Navallas-Irujo, J. (Javier); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Cia, I. (Izaskun); Garcia-Fernandez, N. (Nuria); Villanueva, A. (Arantxa)Accurate segmentation of renal tissues is an essential step for renal perfusion estimation and postoperative assessment of the allograft. Images are usually manually labeled, which is tedious and prone to human error. We present an image analysis method for the automatic estimation of renal perfusion based on perfusion magnetic resonance imaging. Specifically, non-contrasted pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) images are used for kidney transplant evaluation and perfusion estimation, as a biomarker of the status of the allograft. The proposed method uses machine/deep learning tools for the segmentation and classification of renal cortical and medullary tissues and automates the estimation of perfusion values. Data from 16 transplant patients has been used for the experiments. The automatic analysis of differentiated tissues within the kidney, such as cortex and medulla, is performed by employing the time-intensity-curves of non-contrasted T1-weighted MRI series. Spe- cifically, using the Dice similarity coefficient as a figure of merit, results above 93%, 92% and 82% are obtained for whole kidney, cortex, and medulla, respectively. Besides, estimated cortical and medullary perfusion values are considered to be within the acceptable ranges within clinical practice.
- Diagnostic and prognostic potential of multiparametric renal MRI in kidney transplant patients.(Wiley, 2023) Martín-Moreno, P.L. (Paloma L.); Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Garcia-Ruiz, L. (Leyre); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Cano, D. (David); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Mora-Gutiérrez, J.M. (José María); Garcia-Fernandez, N. (Nuria); Villanueva, A. (Arantxa)Background: Multiparametric MRI provides assessment of functional and structural parameters in kidney allografts. It offers a non-invasive alternative to the current reference standard of kidney biopsy. Purpose: To evaluate the diagnostic and prognostic utility of MRI parameters in the assessment of allograft function in the first 3-months post-transplantation. Study Type: Prospective. Subjects: 32 transplant recipients (54 17 years, 20 females), divided into two groups according to estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) at 3-months post-transplantation: inferior graft function (IGF; eGFR<45 mL/min/1.73 m2 , n = 10) and superior graft function (SGF; eGFR ≥ 45 mL/min/1.73 m2 , n = 22). Further categorization was based on the need for hemodialysis (C1) and decrease in s-creatinine (C2) at 1-week post-transplantation: delayed-graft-function (DGF: n = 4 C1, n = 10 C2) and early graft-function (EGF: n = 28 C1, n = 22 C2). Field Strength/Sequence: 3-T, pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling, T1-mapping, and diffusion-weighted imaging. Assessment: Multiparametric MRI was evaluated at 1-week in all patients and 3-months after transplantation in 28 patients. Renal blood flow (RBF), diffusion coefficients (ADC, ΔADC, D, ΔD, D*, flowing fraction f), T1 and ΔT1 were calculated in cortex and medulla. The diagnostic and prognostic value of these parameters, obtained at 3-months and 1-week post-transplantation, respectively, was evaluated in the cortex to discriminate between DGF and EGF, and between SGF and IGF. Statistical Tests: Logistic regression, receiver-operating-characteristics, area-under-the-curve (AUC), confidence intervals (CIs), analysis-of-variance, t-test, Wilcoxon-Mann–Whitney test, Fisher’s exact test, Pearson’s correlation. P-value<0.05 was considered significant. Results: DGF patients exhibited significantly lower cortical RBF and f and higher D*. The diagnostic value of MRI for detecting DGF was excellent (AUC = 100%). Significant differences between patients with IGF and SGF were found in RBF, ΔT1, and ΔD. Multiparametric MRI showed higher diagnostic (AUC = 95.32%; CI: 88%–100%) and prognostic (AUC = 97.47%, CI: 92%–100%) values for detecting IGF than eGFR (AUC = 89.50%, CI: 79%–100%). Data Conclusion: Multiparametric MRI may show high diagnostic and prognostic value in transplanted patients, yielding better results compared to eGFR measurements. Level of Evidence: 2 Technical Efficacy: Stage 1
- Reduction of motion effects in myocardial arterial spin labeling(Wiley, 2021) Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Muñoz-Barrutia, A. (Arrate); Gordaliza, P.M. (Pedro)Purpose To evaluate the accuracy and reproducibility of myocardial blood flow measurements obtained under different breathing strategies and motion correction techniques with arterial spin labeling. Methods A prospective cardiac arterial spin labeling study was performed in 12 volunteers at 3 Tesla. Perfusion images were acquired twice under breath-hold, synchronized-breathing, and free-breathing. Motion detection based on the temporal intensity variation of a myocardial voxel, as well as image registration based on pairwise and groupwise approaches, were applied and evaluated in synthetic and in vivo data. A region of interest was drawn over the mean perfusion-weighted image for quantification. Original breath-hold datasets, analyzed with individual regions of interest for each perfusion-weighted image, were considered as reference values. Results Perfusion measurements in the reference breath-hold datasets were in line with those reported in literature. In original datasets, prior to motion correction, myocardial blood flow quantification was significantly overestimated due to contamination of the myocardial perfusion with the high intensity signal of blood pool. These effects were minimized with motion detection or registration. Synthetic data showed that accuracy of the perfusion measurements was higher with the use of registration, in particular after the pairwise approach, which probed to be more robust to motion. Conclusion Satisfactory results were obtained for the free-breathing strategy after pairwise registration, with higher accuracy and robustness (in synthetic datasets) and higher intrasession reproducibility together with lower myocardial blood flow variability across subjects (in in vivo datasets). Breath-hold and synchronized-breathing after motion correction provided similar results, but these breathing strategies can be difficult to perform by patients.
- Optimization of pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling for renal perfusion imaging(Academic Press, 2021) Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Cano, D. (David); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Garcia-Fernandez, N. (Nuria); Escalada, J. (Javier)Purpose: To evaluate labeling efficiency of pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) and to find the gradient parameters that increase PCASL robustness for renal perfusion measurements. Methods: Aortic blood flow was characterized in 3 groups: young healthy volunteers (YHV1), chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients (CKDP), and healthy controls (HCO). PCASL inversion efficiency was evaluated through numeric simulations considering the measured pulsatile flow velocity profiles and off-resonance effects for a wide range of gradient parameters, and the results were assessed in vivo. The most robust PCASL implementation was used to measure renal blood flow (RBF) in CKDP and HCO. Results: Aortic blood velocities reached peak values of 120 cm/s in YHV1, whereas for elderly subjects values were lower by approximately a factor of 2. Simulations and experiments showed that by reducing the gradient average (Gave ) and the selective to average gradient ratio (Gmax /Gave ), labeling efficiency was maximized and PCASL robustness to off-resonance was improved. The study in CKDP and HCO showed significant differences in RBF between groups. Conclusion: An efficient and robust PCASL scheme for renal applications requires a Gmax /Gave ratio of 6-7 and a Gave value that depends on the aortic blood flow velocities (0.5 mT/m being appropriate for CKDP and HCO).
- Assessment of splenic switch-off with arterial spin labeling in adenosine perfusion cardiac MRI(Wiley, 2022) Solis-Barquero, S.M. (Sergio M.); Echeverría-Chasco, R. (Rebeca); Bastarrika, G. (Gorka); Aramendía-Vidaurreta, V. (Verónica); Vidorreta, M. (Marta); Pascual, M. (Marina); Fernández-Seara, M.A. (María A.); Ezponda, A. (Ana)Background: In patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD), myocardial perfusion is assessed under rest and pharmacological stress to identify ischemia. Splenic switch-off, defined as the stress to rest splenic perfusion attenuation in response to adenosine, has been proposed as an indicator of stress adequacy. Its occurrence has been previously assessed in first-pass perfusion images, but the use of noncontrast techniques would be highly beneficial. Purpose: To explore the ability of pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) to identify splenic switch-off in patients with suspected CAD. Study type: Prospective. Population: Five healthy volunteers (age 24.8 ± 3.8 years) and 32 patients (age 66.4 ± 8.2 years) with suspected CAD. Field strength/sequence: A 1.5-T/PCASL (spin-echo) and first-pass imaging (gradient-echo). Assessment: In healthy subjects, multi-delay PCASL data (500-2000 msec) were acquired to quantify splenic blood flow (SBF) and determine the adequate postlabeling delay (PLD) for single-delay acquisitions (PLD > arterial transit time). In patients, single-delay PCASL (1200 msec) and first-pass perfusion images were acquired under rest and adenosine conditions. PCASL data were used to compute SBF maps and SBF stress-to-rest ratios. Three observers classified patients into "switch-off" and "failed switch-off" groups by visually comparing rest-stress perfusion data acquired with PCASL and first-pass, independently. First-pass categories were used as reference to evaluate the accuracy of quantitative classification. Statistical tests: Wilcoxon signed-rank, Pearson correlation, kappa, percentage agreement, Generalized Linear Mixed Model, Mann-Whitney, Pearson Chi-squared, receiver operating characteristic, area-under-the-curve (AUC) and confusion matrix. Significance: P value < 0.05. Results: A total of 27 patients (84.4%) experienced splenic switch-off according to first-pass categories. Comparison of PCASL-derived SBF maps during stress and rest allowed assessment of splenic switch-off, reflected in a reduction of SBF values during stress. SBF stress-to-rest ratios showed a 97% accuracy (sensitivity = 80%, specificity = 100%, AUC = 85.2%). Data conclusion: This study could demonstrate the feasibility of PCASL to identify splenic switch-off during adenosine perfusion MRI, both by qualitative and quantitative assessments. Evidence level: 2 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: 2.