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1.
Magn Reson Med ; 91(3): 1030-1042, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38013217

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study aimed to quantify T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ for hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate and metabolites in the healthy human brain and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients at 3 T. METHODS: Dynamic T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ values were measured with a metabolite-specific multi-echo spiral sequence. The dynamic T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of [1-13 C]pyruvate, [1-13 C]lactate, and 13 C-bicarbonate was estimated in regions of interest in the whole brain, sinus vein, gray matter, and white matter in healthy volunteers, as well as in kidney tumors and the contralateral healthy kidneys in a separate group of RCC patients. T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ was fit using a mono-exponential function; and metabolism was quantified using pyruvate-to-lactate conversion rate maps and lactate-to-pyruvate ratio maps, which were compared with and without an estimated T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ correction. RESULTS: The T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of pyruvate was shown to vary during the acquisition, whereas the T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of lactate and bicarbonate were relatively constant through time and across the organs studied. The T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of lactate was similar in gray matter (29.75 ± 1.04 ms), white matter (32.89 ± 0.9 ms), healthy kidney (34.61 ± 4.07 ms), and kidney tumor (33.01 ± 2.31 ms); and the T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of bicarbonate was different between whole-brain (108.17 ± 14.05 ms) and healthy kidney (58.45 ± 6.63 ms). The T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of pyruvate had similar trends in both brain and RCC studies, reducing from 75.56 ± 2.23 ms to 22.24 ± 1.24 ms in the brain and reducing from 122.72 ± 9.86 ms to 57.38 ± 7.65 ms in the kidneys. CONCLUSION: Multi-echo dynamic imaging can quantify T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ and metabolism in a single integrated acquisition. Clear differences were observed in the T 2 * $$ {T}_2^{\ast } $$ of metabolites and in their behavior throughout the timecourse.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Renal Cell , Kidney Neoplasms , Humans , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/diagnostic imaging , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/metabolism , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/pathology , Bicarbonates/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Brain/metabolism , Kidney/diagnostic imaging , Kidney/metabolism , Kidney Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Kidney Neoplasms/pathology , Lactates/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism
2.
Magn Reson Med ; 2024 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38775035

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Metabolite-specific balanced SSFP (MS-bSSFP) sequences are increasingly used in hyperpolarized [1-13C]Pyruvate (HP 13C) MRI studies as they improve SNR by refocusing the magnetization each TR. Currently, pharmacokinetic models used to fit conversion rate constants, kPL and kPB, and rate constant maps do not account for differences in the signal evolution of MS-bSSFP acquisitions. METHODS: In this work, a flexible MS-bSSFP model was built that can be used to fit conversion rate constants for these experiments. The model was validated in vivo using paired animal (healthy rat kidneys n = 8, transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate n = 3) and human renal cell carcinoma (n = 3) datasets. Gradient echo (GRE) acquisitions were used with a previous GRE model to compare to the results of the proposed GRE-bSSFP model. RESULTS: Within simulations, the proposed GRE-bSSFP model fits the simulated data well, whereas a GRE model shows bias because of model mismatch. For the in vivo datasets, the estimated conversion rate constants using the proposed GRE-bSSFP model are consistent with a previous GRE model. Jointly fitting the lactate T2 with kPL resulted in less precise kPL estimates. CONCLUSION: The proposed GRE-bSSFP model provides a method to estimate conversion rate constants, kPL and kPB, for MS-bSSFP HP 13C experiments. This model may also be modified and used for other applications, for example, estimating rate constants with other hyperpolarized reagents or multi-echo bSSFP.

3.
Magn Reson Med ; 92(2): 702-714, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38525680

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study aimed to develop a new high-resolution MRI sequence for the imaging of the ultra-short transverse relaxation time (uT2) components in the brain, while simultaneously providing proton density (PD) contrast for reference and quantification. THEORY: The sequence combines low flip angle balanced SSFP (bSSFP) and UTE techniques, together with a 3D dual-echo rosette k-space trajectory for readout. METHODS: The expected image contrast was evaluated by simulations. A study cohort of six healthy volunteers and eight multiple sclerosis (MS) patients was recruited to test the proposed sequence. Subtraction between two TEs was performed to extract uT2 signals. In addition, conventional longitudinal relaxation time (T1) weighted, T2-weighted, and PD-weighted MRI sequences were also acquired for comparison. RESULTS: Typical PD-contrast was found in the second TE images, while uT2 signals were selectively captured in the first TE images. The subtraction images presented signals primarily originating from uT2 components, but only if the first TE is short enough. Lesions in the MS subjects showed hyperintense signals in the second TE images but were hypointense signals in the subtraction images. The lesions had significantly lower signal intensity in subtraction images than normal white matter (WM), which indicated a reduction of uT2 components likely associated with myelin. CONCLUSION: 3D isotropic sub-millimeter (0.94 mm) spatial resolution images were acquired with the novel bSSFP UTE sequence within 3 min. It provided easy extraction of uT2 signals and PD-contrast for reference within a single acquisition.


Subject(s)
Brain , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Multiple Sclerosis , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Multiple Sclerosis/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Male , Female , Algorithms , Middle Aged , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Healthy Volunteers , Computer Simulation
4.
Magn Reson Med ; 91(6): 2417-2430, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38291598

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Recent work has shown MRI is able to measure and quantify signals of phospholipid membrane-bound protons associated with myelin in the human brain. This work seeks to develop an improved technique for characterizing this brain ultrashort- T 2 ∗ $$ {\mathrm{T}}_2\ast $$ component in vivo accounting for T 1 $$ {\mathrm{T}}_1 $$ weighting. METHODS: Data from ultrashort echo time scans from 16 healthy volunteers with variable flip angles (VFA) were collected and fitted into an advanced regression model to quantify signal fraction, relaxation time, and frequency shift of the ultrashort- T 2 ∗ $$ {\mathrm{T}}_2\ast $$ component. RESULTS: The fitted components show intra-subject differences of different white matter structures and significantly elevated ultrashort- T 2 ∗ $$ {\mathrm{T}}_2\ast $$ signal fraction in the corticospinal tracts measured at 0.09 versus 0.06 in other white matter structures and significantly elevated ultrashort- T 2 ∗ $$ {\mathrm{T}}_2\ast $$ frequency shift in the body of the corpus callosum at - $$ - $$ 1.5 versus - $$ - $$ 2.0 ppm in other white matter structures. CONCLUSION: The significantly different measured components and measured T 1 $$ {\mathrm{T}}_1 $$ relaxation time of the ultrashort- T 2 ∗ $$ {\mathrm{T}}_2\ast $$ component suggest that this method is picking up novel signals from phospholipid membrane-bound protons.


Subject(s)
Brain , Protons , Humans , Healthy Volunteers , Phantoms, Imaging , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Phospholipids
5.
Magn Reson Med ; 91(5): 2153-2161, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38193310

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Improving the quality and maintaining the fidelity of large coverage abdominal hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C MRI studies with a patch based global-local higher-order singular value decomposition (GL-HOVSD) spatiotemporal denoising approach. METHODS: Denoising performance was first evaluated using the simulated [1-13 C]pyruvate dynamics at different noise levels to determine optimal kglobal and klocal parameters. The GL-HOSVD spatiotemporal denoising method with the optimized parameters was then applied to two HP [1-13 C]pyruvate EPI abdominal human cohorts (n = 7 healthy volunteers and n = 8 pancreatic cancer patients). RESULTS: The parameterization of kglobal = 0.2 and klocal = 0.9 denoises abdominal HP data while retaining image fidelity when evaluated by RMSE. The kPX (conversion rate of pyruvate-to-metabolite, X = lactate or alanine) difference was shown to be <20% with respect to ground-truth metabolic conversion rates when there is adequate SNR (SNRAUC > 5) for downstream metabolites. In both human cohorts, there was a greater than nine-fold gain in peak [1-13 C]pyruvate, [1-13 C]lactate, and [1-13 C]alanine apparent SNRAUC . The improvement in metabolite SNR enabled a more robust quantification of kPL and kPA . After denoising, we observed a 2.1 ± 0.4 and 4.8 ± 2.5-fold increase in the number of voxels reliably fit across abdominal FOVs for kPL and kPA quantification maps. CONCLUSION: Spatiotemporal denoising greatly improves visualization of low SNR metabolites particularly [1-13 C]alanine and quantification of [1-13 C]pyruvate metabolism in large FOV HP 13 C MRI studies of the human abdomen.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Abdomen/diagnostic imaging , Lactates , Alanine , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism
6.
Magn Reson Med ; 91(6): 2204-2228, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38441968

ABSTRACT

MRI with hyperpolarized (HP) 13C agents, also known as HP 13C MRI, can measure processes such as localized metabolism that is altered in numerous cancers, liver, heart, kidney diseases, and more. It has been translated into human studies during the past 10 years, with recent rapid growth in studies largely based on increasing availability of HP agent preparation methods suitable for use in humans. This paper aims to capture the current successful practices for HP MRI human studies with [1-13C]pyruvate-by far the most commonly used agent, which sits at a key metabolic junction in glycolysis. The paper is divided into four major topic areas: (1) HP 13C-pyruvate preparation; (2) MRI system setup and calibrations; (3) data acquisition and image reconstruction; and (4) data analysis and quantification. In each area, we identified the key components for a successful study, summarized both published studies and current practices, and discuss evidence gaps, strengths, and limitations. This paper is the output of the "HP 13C MRI Consensus Group" as well as the ISMRM Hyperpolarized Media MR and Hyperpolarized Methods and Equipment study groups. It further aims to provide a comprehensive reference for future consensus, building as the field continues to advance human studies with this metabolic imaging modality.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Heart , Liver/diagnostic imaging , Liver/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism
7.
NMR Biomed ; 37(3): e5074, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38054254

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The healthy heart has remarkable metabolic flexibility that permits rapid switching between mitochondrial glucose oxidation and fatty acid oxidation to generate ATP. Loss of metabolic flexibility has been implicated in the genesis of contractile dysfunction seen in cardiomyopathy. Metabolic flexibility has been imaged in experimental models, using hyperpolarized (HP) [2-13 C]pyruvate MRI, which enables interrogation of metabolites that reflect tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle flux in cardiac myocytes. This study aimed to develop methods, demonstrate feasibility for [2-13 C]pyruvate MRI in the human heart for the first time, and assess cardiac metabolic flexibility. METHODS: Good manufacturing practice [2-13 C]pyruvic acid was polarized in a 5 T polarizer for 2.5-3 h. Following dissolution, quality control parameters of HP pyruvate met all safety and sterility criteria for pharmacy release, prior to administration to study subjects. Three healthy subjects each received two HP injections and MR scans, first under fasting conditions, followed by oral glucose load. A 5 cm axial slab-selective spectroscopy approach was prescribed over the left ventricle and acquired at 3 s intervals on a 3 T clinical MRI scanner. RESULTS: The study protocol, which included HP substrate injection, MR scanning, and oral glucose load, was performed safely without adverse events. Key downstream metabolites of [2-13 C]pyruvate metabolism in cardiac myocytes include the glycolytic derivative [2-13 C]lactate, TCA-associated metabolite [5-13 C]glutamate, and [1-13 C]acetylcarnitine, catalyzed by carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT). After glucose load, 13 C-labeling of lactate, glutamate, and acetylcarnitine from 13 C-pyruvate increased by an average of 39.3%, 29.5%, and 114% respectively in the three subjects, which could result from increases in lactate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase, and CAT enzyme activity as well as TCA cycle flux (glucose oxidation). CONCLUSIONS: HP [2-13 C]pyruvate imaging is safe and permits noninvasive assessment of TCA cycle intermediates and the acetyl buffer, acetylcarnitine, which is not possible using HP [1-13 C]pyruvate. Cardiac metabolite measurement in the fasting/fed states provides information on cardiac metabolic flexibility and the acetylcarnitine pool.


Subject(s)
Myocardium , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Myocardium/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Acetylcarnitine/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Lactates/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism
8.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; : e14411, 2024 Jun 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38837851

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: CT Hounsfield Units (HUs) are converted to electron density using a calibration curve obtained from physical measurements of an electron density phantom. HU values assigned to an MRI-derived synthetic computed tomography (sCT) may present a different relationship with electron density compared to CT HU. Correct assignment of sCT HU values is critical for accurate dose calculation and delivery. The goals of this work were to develop a sCT calibration curve using patient data acquired on a clinically commissioned CT scanner and assess for CyberKnife- and volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT)-based MR-only treatment planning of prostate SBRT. METHODS: Same-day CT and MRI simulation in the treatment position were performed on 10 patients treated with SBRT to the prostate. Dixon in-phase and out-of-phase MRIs were acquired on a 3T scanner using a 3D T1-weighted gradient-echo sequence to generate sCTs using a commercial sCT algorithm. CT and sCT datasets were co-registered and HU values compared using mean absolute error (MAE). An optimized HU-to-density calibration curve was created based on average HU values across an institutional patient database for each of the four sCT tissue types. Clinical CyberKnife and VMAT treatment plans were generated on each patient CT and recomputed onto corresponding sCTs. Dose distributions computed using CT and sCT were compared using gamma criteria and dose-volume-histograms. RESULTS: For the optimized calibration curve, HU values were -96, 37, 204, and 1170 and relative electron densities were 0.95, 1.04, 1.1, and 1.7 for adipose, soft tissue, inner bone, and outer bone, respectively. The proposed sCT protocol produced total MAE of 94 ± 20HU. Gamma values mean ± std (min-max) were 98.9% ± 0.9% (97.1%-100%) and 97.7% ± 1.3% (95.3%-99.3%) for VMAT and CyberKnife plans, respectively. CONCLUSION: MRI-derived sCT using the proposed approach shows excellent dosimetric agreement with conventional CT simulation, demonstrating the feasibility of MRI-derived sCT for prostate SBRT treatment planning.

9.
Neuroimage ; 280: 120350, 2023 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37634883

ABSTRACT

Hyperpolarized (HP) 13C Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) was applied for the first time to image and quantify the uptake and metabolism of [2-13C]pyruvate in the human brain to provide new metabolic information on cerebral energy metabolism. HP [2-13C]pyruvate was injected intravenously and imaged in 5 healthy human volunteer exams with whole brain coverage in a 1-minute acquisition using a specialized spectral-spatial multi-slice echoplanar imaging (EPI) pulse sequence to acquire 13C-labeled volumetric and dynamic images of [2-13C]pyruvate and downstream metabolites [5-13C]glutamate and [2-13C]lactate. Metabolic ratios and apparent conversion rates of pyruvate-to-lactate (kPL) and pyruvate-to-glutamate (kPG) were quantified to investigate simultaneously glycolytic and oxidative metabolism in a single injection.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Glutamic Acid , Lactic Acid , Molecular Imaging
10.
Magn Reson Med ; 90(3): 1101-1113, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37158318

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Three-dimensional UTE MRI has shown the ability to provide simultaneous structural and functional lung imaging, but it is limited by respiratory motion and relatively low lung parenchyma SNR. The purpose of this paper is to improve this imaging by using a respiratory phase-resolved reconstruction approach, named motion-compensated low-rank reconstruction (MoCoLoR), which directly incorporates motion compensation into a low-rank constrained reconstruction model for highly efficient use of the acquired data. THEORY AND METHODS: The MoCoLoR reconstruction is formulated as an optimization problem that includes a low-rank constraint using estimated motion fields to reduce the rank, optimizing over both the motion fields and reconstructed images. The proposed reconstruction along with XD and motion state-weighted motion-compensation (MostMoCo) methods were applied to 18 lung MRI scans of pediatric and young adult patients. The data sets were acquired under free-breathing and without sedation with 3D radial UTE sequences in approximately 5 min. After reconstruction, they went through ventilation analyses. Performance across reconstruction regularization and motion-state parameters were also investigated. RESULTS: The in vivo experiments results showed that MoCoLoR made efficient use of the data, provided higher apparent SNR compared with state-of-the-art XD reconstruction and MostMoCo reconstructions, and yielded high-quality respiratory phase-resolved images for ventilation mapping. The method was effective across the range of patients scanned. CONCLUSION: The motion-compensated low-rank regularized reconstruction approach makes efficient use of acquired data and can improve simultaneous structural and functional lung imaging with 3D-UTE MRI. It enables the scanning of pediatric patients under free-breathing and without sedation.


Subject(s)
Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Lung , Young Adult , Humans , Child , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Respiration
11.
Magn Reson Med ; 90(6): 2233-2241, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37665726

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate high-resolution hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C pyruvate MRI for measuring cerebral perfusion in the human brain. METHODS: HP [1-13 C]pyruvate MRI was acquired in five healthy volunteers with a multi-resolution EPI sequence with 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 resolution for pyruvate. Perfusion parameters were calculated from pyruvate MRI using block-circulant singular value decomposition and compared to relative cerebral blood flow calculated from arterial spin labeling (ASL). To examine regional perfusion patterns, correlations between pyruvate and ASL perfusion were performed for whole brain, gray matter, and white matter voxels. RESULTS: High resolution 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 pyruvate images were used to obtain relative cerebral blood flow (rCBF) values that were significantly positively correlated with ASL rCBF values (r = 0.48, 0.20, 0.28 for whole brain, gray matter, and white matter voxels respectively). Whole brain voxels exhibited the highest correlation between pyruvate and ASL perfusion, and there were distinct regional patterns of relatively high ASL and low pyruvate normalized rCBF found across subjects. CONCLUSION: Acquiring HP 13 C pyruvate metabolic images at higher resolution allows for finer spatial delineation of brain structures and can be used to obtain cerebral perfusion parameters. Pyruvate perfusion parameters were positively correlated to proton ASL perfusion values, indicating a relationship between the two perfusion measures. This HP 13 C study demonstrated that hyperpolarized pyruvate MRI can assess cerebral metabolism and perfusion within the same study.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/blood supply , Perfusion , Spin Labels , Cerebrovascular Circulation
12.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 2023 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38041836

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is the third leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. However, early response assessment using the current approach of measuring changes in tumor size on computed tomography (CT) or MRI is challenging. PURPOSE: To investigate the feasibility of hyperpolarized (HP) [1-13 C]pyruvate MRI to quantify metabolism in the normal appearing pancreas and PDA, and to assess changes in PDA metabolism following systemic chemotherapy. STUDY TYPE: Prospective. SUBJECTS: Six patients (65.0 ± 7.6 years, 2 females) with locally advanced or metastatic PDA enrolled prior to starting a new line of systemic chemotherapy. FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: 3-T, T1-weighted gradient echo, metabolite-selective 13 C echoplanar imaging. ASSESSMENT: Time-resolved HP [1-13 C]pyruvate data were acquired before (N = 6) and 4-weeks after (N = 3) treatment initiation. Pyruvate metabolism, as quantified by pharmacokinetic modeling and metabolite area-under-the-curve ratios, was assessed in manually segmented PDA and normal appearing pancreas ROIs (N = 5). The change in tumor metabolism before and 4-weeks after treatment initiation was assessed in primary PDA (N = 2) and liver metastases (N = 1), and was compared to objective tumor response defined by response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST) on subsequent CTs. STATISTICAL TESTS: Descriptive tests (mean ± standard deviation), model fit error for pharmacokinetic rate constants. RESULTS: Primary PDA showed reduced alanine-to-lactate ratios when compared to normal pancreas, due to increased lactate-to-pyruvate or reduced alanine-to-pyruvate ratios. Of the three patients who received HP [1-13 C]pyruvate MRI before and 4-weeks after treatment initiation, one patient had a primary tumor with early metabolic response (increase in alanine-to-lactate) and subsequent partial response according to RECIST, one patient had a primary tumor with relatively stable metabolism and subsequent stable disease by RECIST, and one patient had metastatic PDA with increase in lactate-to-pyruvate of the liver metastases and corresponding progressive disease according to RECIST. DATA CONCLUSION: Altered pyruvate metabolism with increased lactate or reduced alanine was observed in the primary tumor. Early metabolic response assessed at 4-weeks after treatment initiation correlated with subsequent objective tumor response assessed using RECIST. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 2 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.

13.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; 25(1): 77, 2023 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38093285

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The heart has metabolic flexibility, which is influenced by fed/fasting states, and pathologies such as myocardial ischemia and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Hyperpolarized (HP) 13C-pyruvate MRI is a promising new tool for non-invasive quantification of myocardial glycolytic and Krebs cycle flux. However, human studies of HP 13C-MRI have yet to demonstrate regional quantification of metabolism, which is important in regional ischemia and HCM patients with asymmetric septal/apical hypertrophy. METHODS: We developed and applied methods for whole-heart imaging of 13C-pyruvate, 13C-lactate and 13C-bicarbonate, following intravenous administration of [1-13C]-pyruvate. The image acquisition used an autonomous scanning method including bolus tracking, real-time magnetic field calibrations and metabolite-specific imaging. For quantification of metabolism, we evaluated 13C metabolite images, ratio metrics, and pharmacokinetic modeling to provide measurements of myocardial lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) mediated metabolic conversion in 5 healthy volunteers (fasting & 30 min following oral glucose load). RESULTS: We demonstrate whole heart coverage for dynamic measurement of pyruvate-to-lactate conversion via LDH and pyruvate-to-bicarbonate conversion via PDH at a resolution of 6 × 6 × 21 mm3 (13C-pyruvate) and 12 × 12 × 21 mm3 (13C-lactate, 13C-bicarbonate). 13C-pyruvate and 13C-lactate were detected simultaneously in the RV blood pool, immediately after intravenous injection, reflecting LDH activity in blood. In healthy volunteers, myocardial 13C-pyruvate-SNR, 13C-lactate-SNR, 13C-bicarbonate-SNR, 13C-lactate/pyruvate ratio, 13C-pyruvate-to-lactate conversion rate, kPL, and 13C-pyruvate-to-bicarbonate conversion rate, kPB, all had statistically significant increases following oral glucose challenge. kPB, reflecting PDH activity and pyruvate entering the Krebs Cycle, had the highest correlation with blood glucose levels and was statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate first-in-human regional quantifications of cardiac metabolism by HP 13C-pyruvate MRI that aims to reflect LDH and PDH activity.


Subject(s)
Bicarbonates , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Predictive Value of Tests , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Glucose , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes
14.
Magn Reson Med ; 87(4): 1673-1687, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34775639

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The goal of this study was to combine a specialized acquisition method with a new quantification pipeline to accurately and efficiently probe the metabolism of hyperpolarized 13 C-labeled compounds in vivo. In this study, we tested our approach on [2-13 C]pyruvate and [1-13 C]α-ketoglutarate data in rat orthotopic brain tumor models at 3T. METHODS: We used a multiband metabolite-specific radiofrequency (RF) excitation in combination with a variable flip angle scheme to minimize substrate polarization loss and measure fast metabolic processes. We then applied spectral-temporal denoising using singular value decomposition to enhance spectral quality. This was combined with LCModel-based automatic 13 C spectral fitting and flip angle correction to separate overlapping signals and rapidly quantify the different metabolites. RESULTS: Denoising improved the metabolite signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by approximately 5. It also improved the accuracy of metabolite quantification as evidenced by a significant reduction of the Cramer Rao lower bounds. Furthermore, the use of the automated and user-independent LCModel-based quantification approach could be performed rapidly, with the kinetic quantification of eight metabolite peaks in a 12-spectrum array achieved in less than 1 minute. CONCLUSION: The specialized acquisition method combined with denoising and a new quantification pipeline using LCModel for the first time for hyperpolarized 13 C data enhanced our ability to monitor the metabolism of [2-13 C]pyruvate and [1-13 C]α-ketoglutarate in rat orthotopic brain tumor models in vivo. This approach could be broadly applicable to other hyperpolarized agents both preclinically and in the clinical setting.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms , Pyruvic Acid , Animals , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Carbon Isotopes , Kinetics , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Rats , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
15.
Magn Reson Med ; 88(5): 2190-2197, 2022 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35754148

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate multi-resolution hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C pyruvate MRI for measuring kinetic conversion rates in the human brain. METHODS: HP [1-13 C]pyruvate MRI was acquired in 6 subjects with a multi-resolution EPI sequence at 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 resolution for pyruvate and 15 × 15 mm2 resolution for lactate and bicarbonate. With the same lactate data, 2 quantitative maps of pyruvate-to-lactate conversion (kPL ) maps were generated: 1 using 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 resolution pyruvate data and the other using synthetic 15 × 15 mm2 resolution pyruvate data to simulate a standard constant resolution acquisition. To examine local kPL values, 4 voxels were manually selected in each study representing brain tissue near arteries, brain tissue near veins, white matter, and gray matter. RESULTS: High resolution 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 pyruvate images increased the spatial delineation of brain structures and decreased partial volume effects compared to coarser resolution 15 × 15 mm2 pyruvate images. Voxels near arteries, veins and in white matter exhibited higher calculated kPL for multi-resolution images. CONCLUSION: Acquiring HP 13 C pyruvate metabolic data with a multi-resolution approach minimized partial volume effects from vascular pyruvate signals while maintaining the SNR of downstream metabolites. Higher resolution pyruvate images for kinetic fitting resulted in increased kinetic rate values, particularly around the superior sagittal sinus and cerebral arteries, by reducing extracellular pyruvate signal contributions from adjacent blood vessels. This HP 13 C study showed that acquiring pyruvate with finer resolution improved the quantification of kinetic rates throughout the human brain.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pyruvic Acid , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Humans , Kinetics , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Pyruvic Acid/chemistry
16.
Magn Reson Med ; 88(3): 1039-1054, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35526263

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This study aimed to develop and demonstrate the in vivo feasibility of a 3D stack-of-spiral balanced steady-state free precession(3D-bSSFP) urea sequence, interleaved with a metabolite-specific gradient echo (GRE) sequence for pyruvate and metabolic products, for improving the SNR and spatial resolution of the first hyperpolarized 13 C-MRI human study with injection of co-hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate and [13 C,15 N2 ]urea. METHODS: A metabolite-specific bSSFP urea imaging sequence was designed using a urea-specific excitation pulse, optimized TR, and 3D stack-of-spiral readouts. Simulations and phantom studies were performed to validate the spectral response of the sequence. The image quality of urea data acquired by the 3D-bSSFP sequence and the 2D-GRE sequence was evaluated with 2 identical injections of co-hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate and [13 C,15 N2 ]urea formula in a rat. Subsequently, the feasibility of the acquisition strategy was validated in a prostate cancer patient. RESULTS: Simulations and phantom studies demonstrated that 3D-bSSFP sequence achieved urea-only excitation, while minimally perturbing other metabolites (<1%). An animal study demonstrated that compared to GRE, bSSFP sequence provided an ∼2.5-fold improvement in SNR without perturbing urea or pyruvate kinetics, and bSSFP approach with a shorter spiral readout reduced blurring artifacts caused by J-coupling of [13 C,15 N2 ]urea. The human study demonstrated the in vivo feasibility and data quality of the acquisition strategy. CONCLUSION: The 3D-bSSFP urea sequence with a stack-of-spiral acquisition demonstrated significantly increased SNR and image quality for [13 C,15 N2 ]urea in co-hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate and [13 C,15 N2 ]urea imaging studies. This work lays the foundation for future human studies to achieve high-quality and high-SNR metabolism and perfusion images.


Subject(s)
Pyruvic Acid , Urea , Animals , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Male , Perfusion , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Rats
17.
Magn Reson Med ; 87(1): 138-149, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34374471

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The combined hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C pyruvate and urea MRI has provided a simultaneous assessment of glycolytic metabolism and tissue perfusion for improved cancer diagnosis and therapeutic evaluation in preclinical studies. This work aims to translate this dual-probe HP imaging technique to clinical research. METHODS: A co-polarization system was developed where [1-13 C]pyruvic acid (PA) and [13 C, 15 N2 ]urea in water solution were homogeneously mixed and polarized on a 5T SPINlab system. Physical and chemical characterizations and toxicology studies of the combined probe were performed. Simultaneous metabolic and perfusion imaging was performed on a 3T clinical MR scanner by alternatively applying a multi-slice 2D spiral sequence for [1-13 C]pyruvate and its downstream metabolites and a 3D balanced steady-state free precession (bSSFP) sequence for [13 C, 15 N2 ]urea. RESULTS: The combined PA/urea probe has a glass-formation ability similar to neat PA and can generate nearly 40% liquid-state 13 C polarization for both pyruvate and urea in 3-4 h. A standard operating procedure for routine on-site production was developed and validated to produce 40 mL injection product of approximately 150 mM pyruvate and 35 mM urea. The toxicology study demonstrated the safety profile of the combined probe. Dynamic metabolite-specific imaging of [1-13 C]pyruvate, [1-13 C]lactate, [1-13 C]alanine, and [13 C, 15 N2 ]urea was achieved with adequate spatial (2.6 mm × 2.6 mm) and temporal resolution (4.2 s), and urea images showed reduced off-resonance artifacts due to the JCN coupling. CONCLUSION: The reported technical development and translational studies will lead to the first-in-human dual-agent HP MRI study and mark the clinical translation of the first HP 13 C MRI probe after pyruvate.


Subject(s)
Pyruvic Acid , Urea , Carbon Isotopes , Humans , Lactic Acid , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Perfusion Imaging
18.
Magn Reson Med ; 88(6): 2609-2620, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35975978

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop techniques and establish a workflow using hyperpolarized carbon-13 (13 C) MRI and the pyruvate-to-lactate conversion rate (kPL ) biomarker to guide MR-transrectal ultrasound fusion prostate biopsies. METHODS: The integrated multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) exam consisted of a 1-min hyperpolarized 13 C-pyruvate EPI acquisition added to a conventional prostate mpMRI exam. Maps of kPL values were calculated, uploaded to a picture archiving and communication system and targeting platform, and displayed as color overlays on T2 -weighted anatomic images. Abdominal radiologists identified 13 C research biopsy targets based on the general recommendation of focal lesions with kPL >0.02(s-1 ), and created a targeting report for each study. Urologists conducted transrectal ultrasound-guided MR fusion biopsies, including the standard 1 H-mpMRI targets as well as 12-14 core systematic biopsies informed by the research 13 C-kPL targets. All biopsy results were included in the final pathology report and calculated toward clinical risk. RESULTS: This study demonstrated the safety and technical feasibility of integrating hyperpolarized 13 C metabolic targeting into routine 1 H-mpMRI and transrectal ultrasound fusion biopsy workflows, evaluated via 5 men (median age 71 years, prostate-specific antigen 8.4 ng/mL, Cancer of the Prostate Risk Assessment score 2) on active surveillance undergoing integrated scan and subsequent biopsies. No adverse event was reported. Median turnaround time was less than 3 days from scan to 13 C-kPL targeting, and scan-to-biopsy time was 2 weeks. Median number of 13 C targets was 1 (range: 1-2) per patient, measuring 1.0 cm (range: 0.6-1.9) in diameter, with a median kPL of 0.0319 s-1 (range: 0.0198-0.0410). CONCLUSIONS: This proof-of-concept work demonstrated the safety and feasibility of integrating hyperpolarized 13 C MR biomarkers to the standard mpMRI workflow to guide MR-transrectal ultrasound fusion biopsies.


Subject(s)
Prostate , Prostatic Neoplasms , Aged , Humans , Image-Guided Biopsy/methods , Lactates , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Prospective Studies , Prostate/diagnostic imaging , Prostate/pathology , Prostate-Specific Antigen , Prostatic Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Pyruvic Acid , Ultrasonography, Interventional/methods
19.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 56(6): 1792-1806, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35420227

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hyperpolarized 13 C MRI quantitatively measures enzyme-catalyzed metabolism in cancer and metabolic diseases. Whole-abdomen imaging will permit dynamic metabolic imaging of several abdominal organs simultaneously in healthy and diseased subjects. PURPOSE: Image hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate and products in the abdomens of healthy volunteers, overcoming challenges of motion, magnetic field variations, and spatial coverage. Compare hyperpolarized [1-13 C]pyruvate metabolism across abdominal organs of healthy volunteers. STUDY TYPE: Prospective technical development. SUBJECTS: A total of 13 healthy volunteers (8 male), 21-64 years (median 36). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: A 3 T. Proton: T1 -weighted spoiled gradient echo, T2 -weighted single-shot fast spin echo, multiecho fat/water imaging. Carbon-13: echo-planar spectroscopic imaging, metabolite-specific echo-planar imaging. ASSESSMENT: Transmit magnetic field was measured. Variations in main magnetic field (ΔB0 ) determined using multiecho proton acquisitions were compared to carbon-13 acquisitions. Changes in ΔB0 were measured after localized shimming. Improvements in metabolite signal-to-noise ratio were calculated. Whole-organ regions of interests were drawn over the liver, spleen, pancreas, and kidneys by a single investigator. Metabolite signals, time-to-peak, decay times, and mean first-order rate constants for pyruvate-to-lactate (kPL ) and alanine (kPA ) conversion were measured in each organ. STATISTICAL TESTS: Linear regression, one-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, paired t-tests, one-way ANOVA, Tukey's multiple comparisons tests. P ≤ 0.05 considered statistically significant. RESULTS: Proton ΔB0 maps correlated with carbon-13 ΔB0 maps (slope = 0.93, y-intercept = -2.88, R2  = 0.73). Localized shimming resulted in mean frequency offset within ±25 Hz for all organs. Metabolite SNR significantly increased after denoising. Mean kPL and kPA were highest in liver, followed by pancreas, spleen, and kidneys (all comparisons with liver were significant). DATA CONCLUSION: Whole-abdomen coverage with hyperpolarized carbon-13 MRI was feasible despite technical challenges. Multiecho gradient echo 1 H acquisitions accurately predicted chemical shifts observed using carbon-13 spectroscopy. Carbon-13 acquisitions benefited from local shimming. Metabolite energetics in the abdomen compiled for healthy volunteers can be used to design larger clinical trials in patients with metabolic diseases. EVIDENCE LEVEL: 2 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 1.


Subject(s)
Protons , Pyruvic Acid , Humans , Male , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Healthy Volunteers , Prospective Studies , Carbon Isotopes , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Abdomen/diagnostic imaging
20.
Cancer ; 127(15): 2693-2704, 2021 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33844280

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Optimal treatment selection for localized renal tumors is challenging because of their variable biologic behavior and limitations in the preoperative assessment of tumor aggressiveness. The authors investigated the emerging hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique to noninvasively assess tumor lactate production, which is strongly associated with tumor aggressiveness. METHODS: Eleven patients with renal tumors underwent HP 13 C pyruvate MRI before surgical resection. Tumor 13 C pyruvate and 13 C lactate images were acquired dynamically. Five patients underwent 2 scans on the same day to assess the intrapatient reproducibility of HP 13 C pyruvate MRI. Tumor metabolic data were compared with histopathology findings. RESULTS: Eight patients had tumors with a sufficient metabolite signal-to-noise ratio for analysis; an insufficient tumor signal-to-noise ratio was noted in 2 patients, likely caused by poor tumor perfusion and, in 1 patient, because of technical errors. Of the 8 patients, 3 had high-grade clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), 3 had low-grade ccRCC, and 2 had chromophobe RCC. There was a trend toward a higher lactate-to-pyruvate ratio in high-grade ccRCCs compared with low-grade ccRCCs. Both chromophobe RCCs had relatively high lactate-to-pyruvate ratios. Good reproducibility was noted across the 5 patients who underwent 2 HP 13 C pyruvate MRI scans on the same day. CONCLUSIONS: The current results demonstrate the feasibility of HP 13 C pyruvate MRI for investigating the metabolic phenotype of localized renal tumors. The initial data indicate good reproducibility of metabolite measurements. In addition, the metabolic data indicate a trend toward differentiating low-grade and high-grade ccRCCs, the most common subtype of renal cancer. LAY SUMMARY: Renal tumors are frequently discovered incidentally because of the increased use of medical imaging, but it is challenging to identify which aggressive tumors should be treated. A new metabolic imaging technique was applied to noninvasively predict renal tumor aggressiveness. The imaging results were compared with tumor samples taken during surgery and showed a trend toward differentiating between low-grade and high-grade clear cell renal cell carcinomas, which are the most common type of renal cancers.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Renal Cell , Kidney Neoplasms , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/pathology , Humans , Kidney Neoplasms/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results
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