Research Article Details

Article ID: A19804
PMID: 26340812
Source: Eur Radiol
Title: Feasibility of a three-step magnetic resonance imaging approach for the assessment of hepatic steatosis in an asymptomatic study population.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To determine the feasibility of a multi-step magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) approach for comprehensive assessment of hepatic steatosis defined as liver fat content of &#8805;5&#160;% in an asymptomatic population. METHODS: The study was approved by the institutional review board and written informed consent of all participants was obtained. Participants of a population-based study cohort underwent a three-step 3-T MRI-based assessment of liver fat. A dual-echo Dixon sequence was performed to identify subjects with hepatic steatosis, followed by a multi-echo Dixon sequence with proton density fat fraction estimation. Finally, single-voxel T2-corrected multi-echo spectroscopy was performed. RESULTS: A total of 215 participants completed the MRI protocol (56.3&#160;% male, average age 57.2&#8201;&#177;&#8201;9.4&#160;years). The prevalence of hepatic steatosis was 55&#160;%. Mean liver proton density fat fraction was 9.2&#8201;&#177;&#8201;8.5&#160;% by multi-echo Dixon and 9.3&#8201;&#177;&#8201;8.6&#160;% by multi-echo spectroscopy (p&#8201;=&#8201;0.51). Dual-echo Dixon overestimated liver fat fraction by 1.4&#8201;&#177;&#8201;2.0&#160;% (p&#8201;<&#8201;0.0001). All measurements showed excellent correlations (r&#8201;&#8805;&#8201;0.9, p&#8201;<&#8201;0.001). Dual-echo Dixon was highly sensitive for the detection of hepatic steatosis (sensitivity 0.97, NPV 0.96) with good specificity and PPV (0.75 and 0.81, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: A multi-step MRI approach may enable rapid and accurate identification of subjects with hepatic steatosis in an asymptomatic population. KEY POINTS: &#8226; Dual-echo Dixon can rapidly and reliably exclude hepatic steatosis without complex post-processing. &#8226; Multi-echo Dixon and multi-echo spectroscopy yield similar results regarding hepatic fat quantification. &#8226; Each sequence can be performed in one breath-hold. &#8226; These sequences can be implemented in routine abdominal MRI protocols. &#8226; Thus hepatic fat can be evaluated without relevant increase in scan time.
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-015-3966-y