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Abstract #3837

Multi-exponential T2* mapping distinguishes benign/malignant lymph nodes in rectal cancer patients: an ex-vivo and in-vivo experiment

Inês Santiago1, João Santinha2, Andrada Ianus3,4, Nickolas Papanikolaou2, Celso Matos1, and Noam Shemesh3

1Radiology Department, Champalimaud Research, Champalimaud Centre for the Unkown, Lisbon, Portugal, 2Computational Clinical Imaging Group, Champalimaud Research, Champalimaud Centre for the Unkown, Lisbon, Portugal, 3Neuroplasticity and Neural Activity Lab, Champalimaud Research, Champalimaud Centre for the Unkown, Lisbon, Portugal, 4Centre for Medical Imaging Computing, Department of Computer Science, University College London, London, United Kingdom

In rectal cancer patient management, quality-of-life compromise due to unnecessary neoadjuvant chemoradiation is a major concern and may be driven by false positive lymph node(LN) staging. We sought to distinguish benign LNs from LNs with different patterns of malignant infiltration by investigating multi-exponential decay in multi-gradient-echo(MGE) MRI ex-vivo, at 16.4T. The experiment was translated to the clinic and performed at 1.5T during rectal cancer staging. We found that the 2-compartment model of T2* decay allows malignant and benign LNs to be distinguished in clinical images with a higher specificity than that of conventional criteria, namely short-axis>5mm, border irregularity and mixed signal intensity.

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