Repeat it without me: Crowdsourcing the T1 mapping common ground via the ISMRM reproducibility challenge

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Repeat it without me: Crowdsourcing the T1 mapping common ground via the ISMRM reproducibility challenge
المؤلفون: Boudreau, Mathieu, Karakuzu, Agah, Cohen-Adad, Julien, Bozkurt, Ecem, Carr, Madeline, Castellaro, Marco, Concha, Luis, Doneva, Mariya, Dual, Seraina A., Ensworth, Alex, Foias, Alexandru, Fortier, Veronique, Gabr, Refaat E., Gilbert, Guillaume, Glide-Hurst, Carri K., Grech-Sollars, Matthew, Hu, Siyuan, Jalnefjord, Oscar, 1989, Jovicich, Jorge, Keskin, Kuebra, Koken, Peter, Kolokotronis, Anastasia, Kukran, Simran, Lee, Nam G., Levesque, Ives R., Li, Bochao, Ma, Dan, Maedler, Burkhard, Maforo, Nyasha G., Near, Jamie, Pasaye, Erick, Ramirez-Manzanares, Alonso, Statton, Ben, Stehning, Christian, Tambalo, Stefano, Tian, Ye, Wang, Chenyang, Weiss, Kilian, Zakariaei, Niloufar, Zhang, Shuo, Zhao, Ziwei, Stikov, Nikola
المصدر: MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE. 92(3):1115-1127
مصطلحات موضوعية: Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Medical Imaging, Radiologi och bildbehandling, inversion recovery, open data, quantitative MRI, reproducibility, T-1 mapping
الوصف: Purpose T-1 mapping is a widely used quantitative MRI technique, but its tissue-specific values remain inconsistent across protocols, sites, and vendors. The ISMRM Reproducible Research and Quantitative MR study groups jointly launched a challenge to assess the reproducibility of a well-established inversion-recovery T-1 mapping technique, using acquisition details from a seminal T-1 mapping paper on a standardized phantom and in human brains. Methods The challenge used the acquisition protocol from Barral et al. (2010). Researchers collected T-1 mapping data on the ISMRM/NIST phantom and/or in human brains. Data submission, pipeline development, and analysis were conducted using open-source platforms. Intersubmission and intrasubmission comparisons were performed. Results Eighteen submissions (39 phantom and 56 human datasets) on scanners by three MRI vendors were collected at 3 T (except one, at 0.35 T). The mean coefficient of variation was 6.1% for intersubmission phantom measurements, and 2.9% for intrasubmission measurements. For humans, the intersubmission/intrasubmission coefficient of variation was 5.9/3.2% in the genu and 16/6.9% in the cortex. An interactive dashboard for data visualization was also eveloped: https://rrsg2020.dashboards.neurolibre.org. Conclusion The T-1 intersubmission variability was twice as high as the intrasubmission variability in both phantoms and human brains, indicating that the acquisition details in the original paper were insufficient to reproduce a quantitative MRI protocol. This study reports the inherent uncertainty in T-1 measures across independent research groups, bringing us one step closer to a practical clinical baseline of T-1 variations in vivo.
URL الوصول: https://gup.ub.gu.se/publication/339239
قاعدة البيانات: SwePub
الوصف
تدمد:07403194
15222594
DOI:10.1002/mrm.30111