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Abstract #1360

Importance of Prostatic Fluid on the Apparent Diffusion Coefficient: An IR-Prepared Diffusion-Weighted Investigation of Healthy Prostates

Dominika Skwierawska 1, Sebastian Bickelhaupt1, Maximilian Bachl1, Rolf Janka1, Martina Murr1,2, Felix Gloger1, Tristan Anselm Kuder3,4, Dominique Hadler1, Michael Uder1, and Frederik Laun1
1Institute of Radiology, University Hospital Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany, 2Section for Biomedical Physics, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany, 3Division of Medical Physics in Radiology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany, 4Faculty of Physics and Astronomy, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany

Synopsis

Keywords: Diffusion Modeling, Quantitative Imaging, Signal Modeling, Inversion Recovery, Data Analysis, Contrast Mechanisms, Cancer

Motivation: The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of prostate tissue is generally higher than that of prostate cancer. We hypothesized that the presence of prostatic fluid is partly responsible for the higher ADC.

Goal(s): To elucidate the value of this hypothesis with diffusion-T1-relaxation experiments.

Approach: Diffusion-weighted data of ten healthy participants’ prostates were sampled with a range of IR times and fitted to a two-compartment model (tissue & fluid).

Results: The ADC(TI) dependency was characteristic of the two-compartment model. ADC(TI) increased with TI from 0 to roughly 1,200 ms, then flipped to smaller ADC values and then approached an asymptotic value at large TI.

Impact: This study contributes to a better understanding of prostate DWI contrast. The observed ADC(TI) dependence may be exploited for improved DWI-based prostate cancer diagnostics.

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