Liver iron quantification in children and young adults: comparison of a volumetric multi-echo 3-D Dixon sequence with conventional 2-D T2* relaxometry

Pediatr Radiol. 2022 Jul;52(8):1476-1483. doi: 10.1007/s00247-022-05352-4. Epub 2022 Apr 6.

Abstract

Background: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based liver iron quantification is the standard of care to guide chelation therapy in children at risk of hemochromatosis. T2* relaxometry is the most widely used technique but requires third-party software for post-processing. Vendor-provided three-dimensional (3-D) multi-echo Dixon techniques are now available that allow inline/automated post-processing.

Objective: The purpose of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of a volumetric multi-echo Dixon technique using conventional T2* relaxometry as the reference standard in a pediatric and young adult population.

Materials and methods: In this retrospective study, we queried the radiology information system to identify all MRIs performed for liver iron quantification from July 2015 to January 2020. All patients had undergone T2* relaxometry on a 1.5-tesla (T) scanner for liver iron concentration (LIC) estimation. In addition, a 3-D multi-echo Dixon was performed using Siemens Healthineers LiverLab (Erlangen, Germany). Two readers independently estimated liver R2* and T2* on the multi-echo Dixon by drawing free-hand regions of interest on the scanner-generated R2* and T2* maps. Conventional T2*-relaxometry-based LIC was the reference standard. We estimated interobserver agreement by concordance correlation coefficient (CCC). We used Bland-Altman analysis and Pearson correlation coefficient (r) to compare LIC by the two methods.

Results: Fifty-four MRIs on 38 patients (22 females) were available for analysis. Mean patient age was 11.8 years (standard deviation [SD] 5.3 years). Reference standard LIC ranged 1.1-21.1 (median 6.8) mg/g dry weight of liver. The concordance between readers for T2* estimation using 3-D multi-echo Dixon was substantial (CCC 0.99, confidence interval 0.99-1.00). Bland-Altman plot showed that all observations were clustered around the zero bias line if the LIC average was ≤8 mg/g, and r was very strong (reader 1 r=0.93, reader 2 r=0.92, both P-values <0.001). With increasing LIC, there was a pattern of poor agreement on the Bland-Altman plot, with observations crossing the lower limits of agreement, and r was very weak (reader 1 r=0.05, P-value 0.84; reader 2 r=0.17, P-value 0.44).

Conclusion: Vendor-based 3-D multi-echo Dixon allows for excellent interobserver correlation in liver T2* estimation. LIC estimated by this method has a very strong correlation with conventional T2* relaxometry if liver iron overload is mild-moderate (LIC ≤8 mg/g).

Keywords: Children; Hemosiderosis; Iron; Iron quantification; Liver; Magnetic resonance imaging; T2* relaxometry.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted / methods
  • Iron Overload* / diagnostic imaging
  • Iron* / analysis
  • Liver / diagnostic imaging
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / methods
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Young Adult

Substances

  • Iron