Incremental value of quantitative CMR including parametric mapping for the diagnosis of acute myocarditis

Julian A Luetkens, Rami Homsi, Alois M Sprinkart, Jonas Doerner, Darius Dabir, Daniel L Kuetting, Wolfgang Block, René Andrié, Christian Stehning, Rolf Fimmers, Juergen Gieseke, Daniel K Thomas, Hans H Schild, Claas P Naehle, Julian A Luetkens, Rami Homsi, Alois M Sprinkart, Jonas Doerner, Darius Dabir, Daniel L Kuetting, Wolfgang Block, René Andrié, Christian Stehning, Rolf Fimmers, Juergen Gieseke, Daniel K Thomas, Hans H Schild, Claas P Naehle

Abstract

Aim: Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) can visualize inflammatory tissue changes in acute myocarditis. Several quantitative image-derived parameters have been described to enhance the diagnostic value of CMR, but no direct comparison of these techniques is available.

Methods and results: A total of 34 patients with suspected acute myocarditis and 50 control subjects underwent CMR. CMR protocol included quantitative assessment of T1 relaxation times using modified Look-Locker inversion recovery (MOLLI) and shortened MOLLI (ShMOLLI) acquisition schemes, extracellular volume fraction (ECV), T2 relaxation times, and longitudinal strain. Established Lake-Louise criteria (LLC) consisting of T2-weighted signal intensity ratio (T2-ratio), early gadolinium enhancement ratio (EGEr), and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) were assessed. Receiver operating characteristics analysis was performed to compare diagnostic performance. Areas under the curve of native T1 (MOLLI: 0.95; ShMOLLI: 0.92) and T2 relaxation times (0.92) were higher compared with those of the other CMR parameters (T2-ratio: 0.71, EGEr: 0.71, LGE: 0.87, LLC: 0.90, ECV MOLLI: 0.77, ECV ShMOLLI: 0.80, longitudinal strain: 0.83). Combined with LGE, each native mapping technique outperformed the diagnostic performance of LLC (P < 0.01, respectively). A combination of native parameters (T1, T2, and longitudinal strain) significantly increased the diagnostic performance of CMR compared with LLC without need of contrast media application (0.99 vs. 0.90; P = 0.008).

Conclusion: In patients suspected of having acute myocarditis, diagnostic performance of CMR can be improved by implementation of quantitative CMR parameters. Especially, native mapping techniques have the potential to replace current LLC. CLINICALTRIALS.

Gov number: NCT02299856.

Keywords: Diagnosis; Inflammation; Magnetic resonance imaging; Mapping; Myocarditis.

Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2015. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Typical inflammatory lesion at the subepicardium of the inferolateral wall (basal section) in a 37-year-old male with acute myocarditis. The composition of pictures exemplarily illustrates the alterations of different quantitative tissue parameters in acute oedematous lesions.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Graphs show receiver operating characteristic curves for (A) single Lake-Louise criteria: LGE (AUC: 0.87), T2-ratio (AUC: 0.71), and EGEr (AUC: 0.71); (B) additional quantitative parameters: T1 MOLLI native (AUC: 0.95), ECV MOLLI (AUC: 0.77), T1 ShMOLLI native (AUC: 0.92), ECV ShMOLLI (AUC: 0.80), T2 GraSE (AUC: 0.92), and longitudinal strain (AUC: 0.83); and (C) for different scores: Lake-Louise criteria (AUC: 0.90), LGE + T1 MOLLI (AUC: 0.98), LGE + T1 ShMOLLI (AUC: 0.99), LGE + T2 GraSE (AUC: 0.99), and native score (T1 MOLLI native + T2 GraSE + longitudinal strain) (AUC: 0.99). EGEr, early gadolinium enhancement ratio; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; GraSE, gradient spin echo; MOLLI, modified Look-Locker inversion recovery; ShMOLLI, shortened modified Look-Locker inversion recovery; ECV, extracellular volume fraction.

Source: PubMed

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