Evaluating High Spatial Resolution Diffusion Kurtosis Imaging at 3T: Reproducibility and Quality of Fit

Published: July 12, 2020, 11 a.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.10.197921v1?rss=1 Authors: Loxlan W Kasa, Roy AM Haast, Tristan K Kuehn, Farah N Mushtaha, Corey A Baron, Terry M Peters, Ali R Khan Abstract: Background Diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) quantifies the microstructure non-Gaussian diffusion properties. However, it has increased fitting parameters and requires higher b-values. Evaluation of DKI reproducibility is important for clinical purposes. Purpose To assess reproducibility in whole-brain high resolution DKI at varying b-values. Study Type Prospective. Subjects and Phantoms Forty-four individuals from the test-retest Human Connectome Project (HCP) database and twelve 3D-printed tissue mimicking phantoms. Field Strength/Sequence Multiband echo-planar imaging for in vivo and phantom diffusion-weighted imaging at 3T and 9.4T respectively. MPRAGE at 3T for in vivo structural data. Assessment From HCP data with b-value =1000,2000,3000 s/mm2 (dataset A), two additional datasets with b-values=1000, 3000 s/mm2 (dataset B) and b-values=1000, 2000 s/mm2 (dataset C) were extracted. Estimated DKI metrics from each dataset were used for evaluating reproducibility and fitting quality in whole-brain white matter (WM), region of interest (ROI) and gray matter (GM). Statistical Tests DKI reproducibility was assessed using the within-subject coefficient of variation (CoV), fitting residuals to evaluate DKI fitting accuracy and Pearson's correlation to investigate presence of systematic biases. Results Compared to dataset C, the CoV from DKI parameters from datasets A and B were comparable, with WM and GM CoVs <20%, while differences between datasets were smaller for the DKI-derived DTI parameters. Slightly higher fitting residuals were observed in dataset C compared to A and B, but lower residuals in dataset B were detected for the WM ROIs. A similar trend was observed for the phantom data with comparable CoVs at varying fiber orientations for datasets A and B. In addition, dataset C was characterized by higher residuals across the different fiber crossings. Data Conclusion The comparable reproducibility of DKI maps between datasets A and B observed in the in vivo and phantom data indicates that high reproducibility can still be achieved within a reasonable scan time, supporting DKI for clinical purposes.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info