Meeting Banner
Abstract #2905

Assessment of the feasibility and optimal dosing of human abdominal deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) at 3T

Pascal Wodtke1,2, Mary A McLean1,2, Ines Horvath-Menih1,2, Jonathan R Birchall1,2, Maria J Zamora-Morales1,2, Ashley Grimmer1,2, Elizabeth Latimer1,2, Marta Wylot1,2, Rolf F Schulte3, and Ferdia A Gallagher1,2
1Department of Radiology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 2Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 3GE Healthcare, Munich, Germany

Synopsis

Keywords: Deuterium, Non-Proton, Translational Studies

Motivation: DMI is a promising non-invasive metabolic imaging tool, but clinical field strength and abdominal spectroscopy pose significant technical challenges.

Goal(s): To adapt abdominal DMI to clinical settings by optimizing the RF coil setup, [6,6’-²H2]glucose dose, and data processing, establishing the basis for future clinical applications.

Approach: 5 healthy volunteers underwent imaging on 2-3 occasions with varying [6,6’-²H2]glucose doses.

Results: Unwanted gastric signal was minimized with this setup. Hepatic and renal timecourses were consistent across doses, although decreased doses slightly lowered quantitative values. Abdominal DMI is feasible at 3T, and the [6,6’-²H2]glucose dose can be reduced by one-third without affecting measurement reliability.

Impact: This study shows the feasibility of human abdominal DMI at clinical field strengths. It demonstrates signal timecourses within the healthy kidney and liver as a reference for future clinical studies. In addition a dose reduction lowers the DMI scan costs.

How to access this content:

For one year after publication, abstracts and videos are only open to registrants of this annual meeting. Registrants should use their existing login information. Non-registrant access can be purchased via the ISMRM E-Library.

After one year, current ISMRM & ISMRT members get free access to both the abstracts and videos. Non-members and non-registrants must purchase access via the ISMRM E-Library.

After two years, the meeting proceedings (abstracts) are opened to the public and require no login information. Videos remain behind password for access by members, registrants and E-Library customers.

Click here for more information on becoming a member.

Keywords