• Radiology · Jan 2015

    Fast whole-brain three-dimensional macromolecular proton fraction mapping in multiple sclerosis.

    • Vasily L Yarnykh, James D Bowen, Alexey Samsonov, Pavle Repovic, Angeli Mayadev, Peiqing Qian, Beena Gangadharan, Bart P Keogh, Kenneth R Maravilla, and Lily K Jung Henson.
    • From the Department of Radiology, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St, Seattle, WA 98195 (V.L.Y., K.R.M.); Multiple Sclerosis Center (J.D.B., P.R., A.M., P.Q., B.G., L.K.J.H.) and Department of Radiology (B.P.K.), Swedish Neuroscience Institute, Seattle, Wash; and Department of Radiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis (A.S.).
    • Radiology. 2015 Jan 1; 274 (1): 210-20.

    PurposeTo evaluate the clinical utility of fast whole-brain macromolecular proton fraction ( MPF macromolecular proton fraction ) mapping in multiple sclerosis ( MS multiple sclerosis ) and compare MPF macromolecular proton fraction with established quantitative magnetic resonance (MR) imaging measures of tissue damage including magnetization transfer ( MT magnetization transfer ) ratio and relaxation rate (R1).Materials And MethodsIn this institutional review board-approved and HIPAA-compliant study, 14 healthy control participants, 18 relapsing-remitting MS multiple sclerosis ( RRMS relaxing-remitting MS ) patients, and 12 secondary progressive MS multiple sclerosis ( SPMS secondary progressive MS ) patients provided written informed consent and underwent 3-T MR imaging. Three-dimensional MPF macromolecular proton fraction maps were reconstructed from MT magnetization transfer -weighted images and R1 maps by the single-point method. Mean MPF macromolecular proton fraction , R1, and MT magnetization transfer ratio in normal-appearing white matter ( WM white matter ), gray matter ( GM gray matter ), and lesions were compared between subject groups by using analysis of variance. Correlations (Pearson r) between imaging data and clinical scores (Expanded Disability Status Scale [EDSS] and MS multiple sclerosis Functional Composite [ MSFC MS functional composite ]) were compared by using Hotelling-Williams test.ResultsRRMS relaxing-remitting MS patients had lower WM white matter and GM gray matter MPF macromolecular proton fraction than controls, with percentage decreases of 6.5% (P < .005) and 5.4% (P < .05). MPF macromolecular proton fraction in SPMS secondary progressive MS was reduced relative to RRMS relaxing-remitting MS in WM white matter , GM gray matter , and lesions by 6.4% (P < .005), 13.4% (P < .005), and 11.7% (P < .05), respectively. EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale and MSFC MS functional composite demonstrated strongest correlations with MPF macromolecular proton fraction in GM gray matter (r = -0.74 and 0.81; P < .001) followed by WM white matter (r = -0.57 and 0.72; P < .01) and lesions (r = -0.42 and 0.50; P < .05). R1 and MT magnetization transfer ratio in all tissues were significantly less correlated with clinical scores than GM gray matter MPF macromolecular proton fraction (P < .05).ConclusionMPF macromolecular proton fraction mapping enables quantitative assessment of demyelination in normal-appearing brain tissues and shows primary clinical relevance of GM gray matter damage in MS multiple sclerosis . MPF macromolecular proton fraction outperforms MT magnetization transfer ratio and R1 in detection of MS multiple sclerosis -related tissue changes.

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