Our goal in this project is to overcome major barriers preventing MRI from being the clinical standard for carotid disease evaluation. Carotid MRI is unique in that it has the potential to accurately measure vulnerable plaque markers in addition to the clinically relevant measurement of percent diameter stenosis. In addition to carotid stenosis, studies using MRI in the research setting have found that carotid intraplaque inflammation (IPI), intraplaque hemorrhage (IPH), necrotic core (NC), and fibrous cap (FC) thickness and disruption are important stroke risk factors. Although MRI has the potential to measure these factors, major barriers still exist to using carotid MRI in the clinical setting. These include 1) he lack of a coil specific to the anatomic location of the carotid bifurcation in all patients and 2) he lack of high-resolution MRI sequences to accurately measure lumen, stenosis, and plaque components in the presence of respiratory, cardiac, and swallowing motion. In this project we will: 1) develop a novel carotid imaging coil with modular interchangeable arrays on formers that match the range of patient neck anatomy encountered; 2) develop innovative pulse sequences to accurately measure carotid lumen, stenosis and plaque components; 3) develop pulse sequence methods and reconstruction algorithms to detect and correct motion-corrupted measurements; and 4) validate these results by comparison with histology. The development of tailor-made subject fitting RF coils will increase SNR and allow higher spatial and temporal resolution. This increased SNR from the modular coils coupled with motion- robust sequences will increase accuracy of identifying in-vivo plaque components. This will lay the foundation for future studies using carotid MRI to optimally characterize stroke risk and monitor treatment effects geared toward decreasing IPI, IPH, NC, and stabilizing the FC. These methods that conveniently, consistently, and accurately depict carotid lumen and plaque components will overcome the major barriers to the use of MRI as the clinical standard in characterizing carotid disease. This will facilitate the transition of carotid MRI from the research setting where MRI methods have been developed to the general clinic where benefit to the individual patient will be obtained and costs to society will ultimately be reduced.

Public Health Relevance

Carotid MRI is unique in that it has the potential to accurately measure vulnerable plaque markers in addition to the clinically relevant measurement of percent diameter stenosis. The goal in this project is to improve MRI pulse sequences and coils to overcome barriers that impede carotid MRI from being the primary carotid imaging method used clinically.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL127582-03
Application #
9547491
Study Section
Biomedical Imaging Technology Study Section (BMIT)
Program Officer
Evans, Frank
Project Start
2016-08-17
Project End
2020-07-31
Budget Start
2018-08-01
Budget End
2019-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Utah
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009095365
City
Salt Lake City
State
UT
Country
United States
Zip Code
84112
McNally, J Scott; Hinckley, Peter J; Sakata, Akihiko et al. (2018) Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Clinical Factors Associated With Ischemic Stroke in Patients Suspected of Cervical Artery Dissection. Stroke 49:2337-2344
Beck, Michael J; Parker, Dennis L; Bolster Jr, Bradley D et al. (2017) Interchangeable neck shape-specific coils for a clinically realizable anterior neck phased array system. Magn Reson Med 78:2460-2468
Kim, Seong-Eun; Roberts, John A; Eisenmenger, Laura B et al. (2017) Motion-insensitive carotid intraplaque hemorrhage imaging using 3D inversion recovery preparation stack of stars (IR-prep SOS) technique. J Magn Reson Imaging 45:410-417
Svedin, Bryant T; Parker, Dennis L (2017) Technical Note: The effect of 2D excitation profile on T1 measurement accuracy using the variable flip angle method with an average flip angle assumption. Med Phys 44:5930-5937
McNally, J Scott; Kim, Seong-Eun; Mendes, Jason et al. (2017) Magnetic Resonance Imaging Detection of Intraplaque Hemorrhage. Magn Reson Insights 10:1-8