High resolution pituitary gland MRI at 7.0 tesla: a clinical evaluation in Cushing’s disease

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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the detection of pituitary lesions at 7.0 T compared to 1.5 T MRI in 16 patients with clinically and biochemically proven Cushing’s disease. Methods: In seven patients, no lesion was detected on the initial 1.5 T MRI, and in nine patients it was uncertain whether there was a lesion. Firstly, two readers assessed both 1.5 T and 7.0 T MRI examinations unpaired in a random order for the presence of lesions. Consensus reading with a third neuroradiologist was used to define final lesions in all MRIs. Secondly, surgical outcome was evaluated. A comparison was made between the lesions visualized with MRI and the lesions found during surgery in 9/16 patients. Results: The interobserver agreement for lesion detection was good at 1.5 T MRI (κ = 0.69) and 7.0 T MRI (κ = 0.62). In five patients, both the 1.5 T and 7.0 T MRI enabled visualization of a lesion on the correct side of the pituitary gland. In three patients, 7.0 T MRI detected a lesion on the correct side of the pituitary gland, while no lesion was visible at 1.5 T MRI. Conclusion: The interobserver agreement of image assessment for 7.0 T MRI in patients with Cushing’s disease was good, and lesions were detected more accurately with 7.0 T MRI. Key Points: • Interobserver agreement for lesion detection on 1.5 T MRI was good; • Interobserver agreement for lesion detection on 7.0 T MRI was good; • 7.0 T enabled confirmation of unclear lesions at 1.5 T; • 7.0 T enabled visualization of lesions not visible at 1.5 T.

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APA

de Rotte, A. A. J., Groenewegen, A., Rutgers, D. R., Witkamp, T., Zelissen, P. M. J., Meijer, F. J. A., … Hendrikse, J. (2016). High resolution pituitary gland MRI at 7.0 tesla: a clinical evaluation in Cushing’s disease. European Radiology, 26(1), 271–277. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-015-3809-x

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