Radiology
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


     


Published online before print January 15, 2003, 10.1148/radiol.2263011750
This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Figures Only
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow All Versions of this Article:
2263011750v1
226/3/707    most recent
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Bogaert, J.
Right arrow Articles by Rademakers, F. E.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Bogaert, J.
Right arrow Articles by Rademakers, F. E.
(Radiology 2003;226:707-716.)
© RSNA, 2003


Cardiac Imaging

Coronary Artery Imaging with Real-time Navigator Three-dimensional Turbo-Field-Echo MR Coronary Angiography: Initial Experience1

Jan Bogaert, MD, PhD, Ronald Kuzo, MD, Steven Dymarkowski, MD, Roel Beckers, MD, Jan Piessens, MD, PhD and Frank E. Rademakers, MD, PhD

1 From the Departments of Radiology (J.B., S.D., R.B.) and Cardiology (J.P., F.E.R.), Gasthuisberg University Hospital, Leuven, Belgium; and Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Fla (R.K.). Received October 29, 2001; revision requested December 10; final revision received July 17, 2002; accepted August 13. Address correspondence to J.B., Department of Radiology, University Hospitals, Catholic University of Leuven, Herestraat 49, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium (e-mail: jan.bogaert@uz.kuleuven.ac.be).


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
PURPOSE: To examine the value of a commercially available three-dimensional (3D) real-time navigator magnetic resonance (MR) coronary angiographic examination for detection of significant coronary artery stenoses, with conventional coronary angiography as the standard of reference.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-one patients underwent 3D navigator MR coronary angiography immediately before catheterization. Two observers independently graded image quality on a scale from 1 (unreadable) to 5 (excellent), quantified coronary artery visualization, and evaluated the presence of significant (ie, >50% narrowing) stenoses. {kappa} statistics were used to assess interobserver agreement, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to assess stenosis detection.

RESULTS: For two of 21 patients, MR coronary angiogram quality was insufficient for analysis (mean score < 2). For the remaining 19 patients, the mean image quality scores assigned by observers 1 and 2 were 3.3 ± 1.0 (SD) and 3.2 ± 0.9, respectively. A mean of 71% of all coronary artery segments were visible at MR coronary angiography, and there was 91% agreement between the observers ({kappa} = 0.78). Observers 1 and 2 detected significant stenoses (n = 29) at MR coronary angiography with sensitivities of 44.4% and 55.5%, respectively; specificities of 95.1% and 83.7%, respectively; and 80% agreement ({kappa} = 0.35). Areas under the ROC curve were 0.817 and 0.795 for observers 1 and 2, respectively.

CONCLUSION: Large portions of the coronary arteries can be visualized with MR coronary angiography. Imaging results are not consistently reliable, however. The examination is premature for routine clinical assessment of significant coronary artery stenosis owing to low sensitivity and large observer variability.

© RSNA, 2003

Index terms: Coronary angiography, 54.1242, 54.1244 • Coronary vessels, MR, 54.121412, 54.121416, 54.12142 • Coronary vessels, stenosis or obstruction, 54.76 • Magnetic resonance (MR), vascular studies, 54.121412, 54.121416, 54.12142


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Atheromatous coronary artery disease is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries. Conventional coronary angiography (ie, with coronary artery catheterization) remains the standard technique for detecting atheromatous coronary artery disease. This technique is invasive and potentially harmful, however, and necessitates the use of iodinated contrast material and irradiation. Therefore, several techniques for noninvasive or less invasive detection of atheromatous changes in the coronary artery vessels are being researched (1,2). Such techniques could be used to screen or select patients for coronary artery catheterization; this would substantially reduce the number of unnecessary diagnostic catheterizations and thus be potentially cost-effective. Since the late 1980s, several groups have investigated the use of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for depiction of the coronary artery anatomy (3,4) and coronary artery stenoses (5,6), quantification of coronary artery blood flow (7), and characterization of atheromatous plaques (810). With recent improvements in gradient strengths and sequence designs, two-dimensional MR techniques have been replaced for the most part by three-dimensional (3D) MR coronary angiography techniques, which are performed during either breath holding (1113) or free breathing with a navigator (1416).

Our aim in the present study was to examine the value of a commercially available 3D real-time navigator MR coronary angiographic examination in the detection of significant coronary artery stenoses, with conventional coronary angiography as the standard of reference.


    MATERIALS AND METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Patient Group
The study population consisted of 21 patients who were referred for coronary angiography. For 1 month, one patient per day was randomly selected for an MR coronary angiographic study. The method of randomization was based on a table of random numbers used with ranking on the cardiac catheterization list. All MR coronary angiographic examinations were performed within 24 hours before conventional coronary angiography. All patients were clinically suspected of having coronary artery disease (eg, owing to stable angina pectoris, positive stress test results, recurrent chest pain after previous coronary artery bypass graft surgery, etc). Exclusion criteria were artificial pacemakers, intracranial clips, and/or severe claustrophobia. Patients who had undergone coronary artery bypass surgery or intracoronary stent implantation were not excluded from the MR coronary angiography study. However, coronary artery segments with metallic artifacts were excluded from analysis. All coronary angiographic examinations were performed according to the guidelines of the committee on medical ethics and clinical investigation of Gasthuisberg University Hospital. Informed consent was obtained from all patients.

MR Coronary Angiography
All MR coronary angiographic examinations were performed with a 1.5-T whole-body MR unit (Gyroscan ACS-NT; Philips Medical Systems, Best, the Netherlands) with Powertrak 6000 (Philips Medical Systems) gradients (23 mT/m, 220-µsec rise time), a cardiac software patch, and a five-element phased-array cardiac coil (Synergy Coil; Philips Medical Systems). An extended description of the MR coronary angiography technique used in this study has been published elsewhere (14,16,17). Patients were placed in the supine position, and the electrocardiographic leads were placed on the anterior left hemithorax.

The MR coronary angiography protocol included four different image measurements, all of which were performed during free breathing: two-dimensional gradient-echo localizer imaging, 3D turbo- field-echo (TFE) echo-planar localizer imaging (to obtain a scout image), and two 3D TFE submillimeter MR coronary angiographic sequences (for the left and right coronary artery systems). For coronary artery localization and navigator positioning at the right hemidiaphragm, two localizer sequences were performed. The first localizer sequence was an electrocardiographically triggered, free-breathing, multisection two-dimensional segmented gradient-echo (11/2.4 [repetition time msec/echo time msec], 256 x 128 matrix, 450-mm field of view) acquisition of nine transverse, nine coronal, and nine sagittal interleaved images of the thorax (acquisition duration, 1 minute). On these images, the navigator was positioned at the dome of the right hemidiaphragm, and the localized transverse 3D volume for the subsequent scout image was planned (Fig 1).



View larger version (149K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 1. Coronal localizer MR angiogram (11/2.4) shows positioning of the navigator beam through the dome of the right hemidiaphragm. The area outlined by the stacked squares represents the positioning of the navigator on the dome of the right hemidiaphragm.

 
The next localizer sequence involved the acquisition of a 3D TFE echo-planar scout image for localization of the 3D volumes used to obtain submillimeter MR angiograms. This sequence (16/4.8, 40° flip angle, five radio-frequency signals acquired per TFE echo-planar shot followed by 11 echo-planar image readouts to result in an acquisition window of less than 70 msec, 340-mm field of view, 45% rectangular field of view) was oriented transversely through the origin of the right coronary artery (RCA) and left coronary artery tree. The 3D slab covered a 60-mm-thick volume with an in-plane resolution of 1.3 x 1.8 mm. A total of 40 overlapping sections with a reconstructed section thickness of 2.5 mm were acquired.

For enhancement of the contrast between blood and myocardium, a T2-weighted prepulse preparation (18) preceded the navigator and imaging parts of the examination (Fig 2). This preparation, as well as the following two imaging sequences, was performed during the middle phase of diastole. The third and fourth sequences were used to perform 3D submillimeter TFE MR angiography of the coronary arteries—that is, one sequence for the left and one sequence for the right coronary artery system. The 3D-segmented k-space TFE sequences (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) started with the described flow-insensitive T2-weighted prepulse for contrast enhancement followed by a localized anterior saturation prepulse, the navigator, the spectrally selective fat-saturation pulse, and finally the TFE image acquisitions (Fig 2). A bandwidth of 135 Hz per pixel was used. A field of view of 360 mm and a matrix of 512 x 360 yielded an in-plane acquisition spatial resolution of 0.7 x 1.0 mm. The TFE mode consisted of 38 shots, with a low to high fill in of the k space. A 30-mm-thick slab was obtained and yielded 20 1.5-mm-thick sections.



View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 2. Timing and order of sequence elements used to obtain the scout image and submillimeter MR coronary angiograms. ECG = electrocardiography, FAT-SAT = fat saturation sequence, MRA = MR angiography, R = R wave, TFE-EPI = TFE echo-planar imaging.

 
A three-point planning program, which is part of the extended cardiac software package (Philips Medical Systems), was used to locate the right and left coronary arteries on the 3D TFE echo-planar images. The RCA was depicted in three locations on the transverse 3D TFE echo-planar images: the proximal, middle, and distal segments of the RCA. These three points define the geometry of the center plane of the imaged 3D volume that was subsequently used at submillimeter MR coronary angiography (17). To identify the left coronary artery, the left main coronary artery (LM), middle portion of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD), and proximal portion of the left circumflex coronary artery (LCX) were used as landmarks.

The navigator used in the second to fourth sequences (ie, 3D TFE echo-planar scout sequence and two 3D TFE submillimeter sequences) is a vertical two-dimensional selective real-time navigator through the dome of the right hemidiaphragm with a gating window at end expiration of 5 mm (14,17). Thus, shots are only accepted when the diaphragm is within the gating window at end expiration. The measurement efficiency is defined as the number of shots accepted divided by the total number of heart beats to complete an imaging examination and is indicative of the total acquisition time per measurement. The measurement efficiency and total time per MR coronary angiography measurement were measured. In the present study, the navigator was manually started during the downslope (ie, expiration) of the breathing curve. Furthermore, a local shim volume was used to optimize the magnetic field homogeneity of the heart.

Submillimeter MR coronary angiograms through the right and left coronary artery systems were obtained in a random order to reduce or prevent the influence of the duration of the examination (eg, patient movements due to prolonged lying) on the quality of images of the left or right coronary artery system.

Conventional Coronary Angiography
All patients underwent selective conventional coronary artery angiography by means of the Judkins technique within 24 hours after undergoing MR coronary angiography. The images were interpreted by consensus between two cardiologists with 26 (J.P.) and 14 years of experience and who were not involved in the MR coronary angiographic examinations and were blinded with regard to the MR imaging data at the time of the readings. The severity of a coronary artery stenosis was expressed as the percentage reduction in the luminal diameter, as determined by using the quantitative coronary analysis method (19). Only hemodynamically significant lesions (ie, with >=50% reduction in luminal diameter) in the four coronary arteries (ie, RCA, LM, LAD, LCX) were considered. For exact localization of the lesions and comparison of the conventional and MR coronary angiograms, the distance of the lesion along the coronary artery to the origin of the coronary artery was determined.

MR Angiogram Analysis
The MR coronary angiograms were transferred to a commercially available workstation (Easy Vision; Philips Medical Systems) and analyzed in a stepwise manner. The native MR coronary angiograms were independently evaluated by two readers with 10 (J.B.) and 12 (F.E.R.) years of experience in cardiac MR imaging. Consensus was not used to resolve interpretation disagreements. These readers were not involved in performing the MR coronary angiographic examinations, nor were they aware of the conventional coronary angiography results.

First, image quality was qualitatively evaluated on a per-coronary-artery basis by using a five-point grading system similar to that previously used by Duerinckx and Urman (6) to score two-dimensional MR coronary angiograms: 5 meant excellent quality; 4, good quality; 3, moderate quality; 2, poor quality; and 1, nondiagnostic or unreadable. This grading system was based on the signal-to-noise ratio, contrast-to-noise ratio, motion artifacts, and visualization of side branches on each image. For instance, a grade of 2 was assigned when a curvilinear structure was seen in the presumed position of the coronary artery, without clear depiction of the vessel anatomy, whereas a grade of 5 was assigned when large portions of the coronary arteries were visible as sharply defined structures with visible branch vessels. Patients with a mean image quality grade lower than 2 for MR coronary angiographic depiction of the coronary artery tree were not included in the study analysis.

Next, the length and diameter of each coronary artery (ie, CA, LM, LAD, and LCX) were measured. By using electronic calipers, we measured the diameter of each coronary artery proximally—that is, 1 cm beyond the origin.

Finally, the two readers evaluated the MR coronary angiograms for the presence of significant coronary artery lesions—specifically, stenoses of 50% or greater narrowing. With the exception of the LM, each coronary artery was divided into proximal (<3 cm), middle (3–6 cm), and distal (>6 cm) segments, which were abbreviated 1, 2, and 3, respectively. We preferred this approach, in contrast to that involving the use of branch vessels to divide the coronary arteries into segments that was applied in some previous studies (6,15), because branch vessels are not always well visualized, especially on MR coronary angiograms with moderate or poor image quality, and because this approach is less observer dependent—that is, it is less influenced by, for example, the misinterpretation of branch vessel patency status. Thus, for each patient, the coronary artery tree was divided into 10 segments: LM, RCA1, RCA2, RCA3, LAD1, LAD2, LAD3, LCX1, LCX2, and LCX3.

Coronary artery segments that were not visible at MR coronary angiography were excluded from analysis. The remaining visible coronary artery segments were then judged to be normal (ie, no stenosis) or positive for stenosis or occlusion. To each evaluated coronary artery segment, a confidence score from 1 to 5 was assigned: 1 meant definitely normal; 2, minor irregularities but probably normal; 3, possibly a stenotic lesion; 4, probably a stenotic lesion; and 5, definitely a stenotic lesion. These confidence levels were used for receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.

In calculating the sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and positive and negative predictive values of MR coronary angiography, we considered a segment to be normal if it was given a score of 1 or 2 and positive for stenosis or occlusion if it was given a score of 3, 4, or 5. The distance of the stenotic lesion to the origin measured at conventional coronary angiography was used to localize the lesion in a coronary artery segment at MR coronary angiography. To adjust for bias from learning as the images were read, the second observer read the MR coronary angiograms in reverse of the order in which the first observer interpreted the images. Measurement efficiency and total imaging time per coronary artery measurement were measured.

Statistical Analysis
The mean values of vessel length, vessel diameter, and image quality score ± the SDs were calculated. A paired Student t test was used to compare the measurement efficiency between the left and right coronary artery systems. P < .05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference. ROC analysis also was performed to assess lesion detection in coronary artery segments (with nonvisualized segments excluded). ROC analysis was performed by using a maximum-likelihood algorithm (20). The ROC curves were constructed on a per-segment rather than per-patient basis. For these ROC analyses, a degree-of-confidence decision task was used. Confidence scores of 1–5 were used to define four cutoffs points at which sensitivity and specificity values were calculated, and ROC curves were plotted for both readers (21). {kappa} statistic analysis was used to measure agreement between the two readers, which was defined as the agreement beyond chance divided by the amount of agreement possible beyond chance (22).


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Visualization of Coronary Artery Tree at MR Coronary Angiography
For 1 month, 21 randomly selected patients underwent MR coronary angiography. For two patients, the overall image quality grade was lower than 2, so these individuals were excluded from analysis. In the remaining 19 patients (15 men, four women; mean age, 62 years ± 5; age range, 41–76 years), four coronary segments were omitted from analysis because of interfering metallic artifacts from coronary artery bypass graft clips in three segments in the entire RCA and a coronary artery stent in LAD2. Thus, a total of 186 coronary artery segments in 19 patients were evaluated in this study. One hundred thirty-one (reader 1) and 134 (reader 2) arterial segments were visible at MR coronary angiography (mean of 71% of segments visible by both readers [Table 1]).


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]

 
TABLE 1. Visualization of Coronary Artery Tree at MR Coronary Angiography

 
There was 91% (169 of 186 segments) agreement between the two readers regarding the visualization of coronary artery segments ({kappa} = 0.78). The readers disagreed regarding the visualization of 17 (9%) of 186 coronary artery segments. As shown in Table 1, the more distal the coronary artery segment was, the lower the number of visible segments was. One hundred percent of the LM and RCA1 segments were visible. More than 80% of the LAD1, LAD2, LCX1, and RCA2 coronary segments were visible. The percentages for visualization of LAD3, RCA3, and LCX2 were much lower, and LCX3 was not depicted.

The mean lengths and diameters of the coronary arteries are listed in Table 2. The LM had a mean length of 11 mm but a wide range of lengths: Some patients had a very short (ie, 2-mm) LM with a very proximal bifurcation, whereas others had a very long (ie, 19-mm) LM. The lengths of the other coronary arteries corresponded well to the values of coronary artery segment visibility presented in Table 1.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]

 
TABLE 2. Length and Diameter of Coronary Arteries at MR Coronary Angiography

 
Measurement Efficiency
The mean measurement efficiency for the left and right coronary artery systems combined was 41% ± 7 (range, 25%–62%). There was no significant difference in measurement efficiency between the left and right coronary systems (P = .27). The mean imaging time per double-oblique submillimeter 3D image measurement was 16 minutes ± 3 (range, 12–24 minutes).

Image Quality of MR Coronary Angiograms
The mean overall image quality (Table 3) grade for MR coronary angiograms of the coronary artery tree was 3.3 ± 1.0 for reader 1 and 3.2 ± 0.9 for reader 2. These values indicate that the two readers independently assigned similar grades of overall image quality. The values also indicate that the quality of images of the different coronary arteries, with the exception of that for the LM, was judged to be equivalent. Second, on a 1–5 grade scale, an average grade of just higher than 3 indicates moderate overall image quality, with an image quality range of excellent (Fig 3) to poor or even unreadable.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]

 
TABLE 3. Image Quality of MR Coronary Angiograms

 


View larger version (188K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 3a. (a) Transverse 3D TFE MR coronary angiograms (most caudal [top row, far left image] to most cranial [bottom row, far right image]) (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) with excellent image quality (score 5) obtained in a 56-year-old man referred for coronary catheterization. Both readers interpreted these images of the left coronary tree as normal. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings in the same patient confirmed the normal left coronary artery system.

 


View larger version (138K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 3b. (a) Transverse 3D TFE MR coronary angiograms (most caudal [top row, far left image] to most cranial [bottom row, far right image]) (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) with excellent image quality (score 5) obtained in a 56-year-old man referred for coronary catheterization. Both readers interpreted these images of the left coronary tree as normal. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings in the same patient confirmed the normal left coronary artery system.

 
Detection of Hemodynamically Significant Stenoses on MR Coronary Angiograms
A total of 29 hemodynamically significant lesions were identified in the 19 patients at conventional coronary angiography. No significant atherosclerotic lesions were depicted in six patients, single-vessel disease was seen in three patients, and multivessel disease was seen in the remaining patients. Twenty-seven of the 29 stenotic lesions were in segments that were visualized at MR coronary angiography, and two were in segments that were not visualized at MR coronary angiography. Of the lesions that were located in visualized segments, 13 were in the RCA, none were in the LM, 10 were in the LAD, and four were in the LCX (Table 4). Thirteen of the 27 lesions were proximally located, that is, in the LM or the proximal 3 cm of the RCA, LAD, or LCX: Four lesions were in RCA1; five, in LAD1; and four, in LCX1. There were null lesions in the LM. Readers 1 and 2 correctly detected, respectively, 12 and 15 of the 27 hemodynamically significant lesions at MR coronary angiography.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]

 
TABLE 4. Detection of Significant Coronary Artery Lesions at 3D MR Coronary Angiography

 
On the other hand, reader 1 correctly interpreted 99 of 104 coronary artery segments as normal, and reader 2 correctly interpreted 89 of 107 coronary artery segments as normal. As shown in Table 5, these results yielded sensitivities of 44.4% and 55.5%, specificities of 95.1% and 83.7%, accuracies of 84.7% and 79.3%, positive predictive values of 70.5% and 45.5%, and negative predictive values of 86.8% and 88.1%, for readers 1 and 2, respectively. There was an observed agreement of 80% ({kappa} = 0.35) between the readers regarding the presence of significant coronary artery stenoses.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]

 
TABLE 5. Detection of Significant Coronary Stenoses: Statistical Results

 
For 78 and 10 segments, respectively, both readers correctly interpreted the segment as normal or abnormal (Figs 4, 5), whereas for 10 segments and 1 segment, respectively, both readers incorrectly interpreted the segment as normal or abnormal. As shown in Figure 6, the MR coronary angiogram of the RCA in a 63-year-old man was interpreted as normal by both readers, whereas occlusion of RCA1 with filling of the collateral vessels supplied from the left coronary artery system was seen at conventional coronary angiography. One of the readers falsely interpreted 18 and 7 segments, respectively, as abnormal and normal (Fig 7). In the cases of 14 of the 17 coronary artery segments about which the two readers disagreed regarding visualization, the segment was correctly evaluated by one of the readers.



View larger version (152K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 4a. Hemodynamically significant stenosis of RCA2 in a 61-year-old man. (a) Both readers correctly identified the stenosis (arrow) depicted on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle). (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings confirmed the stenosis (arrow).

 


View larger version (149K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 4b. Hemodynamically significant stenosis of RCA2 in a 61-year-old man. (a) Both readers correctly identified the stenosis (arrow) depicted on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle). (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings confirmed the stenosis (arrow).

 


View larger version (188K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 5a. Hemodynamically significant stenosis of LAD1 in a 64-year-old man. (a) Both readers correctly identified the stenosis (arrow) on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle). (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings confirmed the stenosis (arrow).

 


View larger version (153K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 5b. Hemodynamically significant stenosis of LAD1 in a 64-year-old man. (a) Both readers correctly identified the stenosis (arrow) on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle). (b) Conventional coronary angiogram findings confirmed the stenosis (arrow).

 


View larger version (173K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 6a. Proximal occlusion of the RCA in a 63-year-old man. (a) Both readers judged the RCA depicted on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) to be normal. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram obtained a few hours after a shows proximal RCA occlusion (arrow) with retrograde filling of the RCA by collateral vessels (arrowheads).

 


View larger version (174K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 6b. Proximal occlusion of the RCA in a 63-year-old man. (a) Both readers judged the RCA depicted on the 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) to be normal. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram obtained a few hours after a shows proximal RCA occlusion (arrow) with retrograde filling of the RCA by collateral vessels (arrowheads).

 


View larger version (192K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 7a. (a) 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) obtained in a 54-year-old man depicts a coronary artery stent in LAD2 as an area of signal void. The LCX1 is thin and was incorrectly judged by reader 1 to be stenotic. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram obtained in the same patient shows the LCX to be normal.

 


View larger version (141K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 7b. (a) 3D TFE MR coronary angiogram (7.1/1.97, 30° flip angle) obtained in a 54-year-old man depicts a coronary artery stent in LAD2 as an area of signal void. The LCX1 is thin and was incorrectly judged by reader 1 to be stenotic. (b) Conventional coronary angiogram obtained in the same patient shows the LCX to be normal.

 
When the detection of significant stenoses at MR coronary angiography was analyzed on a per-patient basis, with inclusion of all visible coronary artery segments, sensitivities were 84.6% and 92.3%, respectively, and specificities were 83.3% and 50.0%, respectively, for readers 1 and 2. At per-patient analysis, with inclusion of only the LM and RCA1, LAD1, and LCX1, sensitivities were 70% and 50%, respectively, and specificities were 88.3% and 45.5%, respectively, for readers 1 and 2. The ROC curves for both readers shown in Figure 8 demonstrate areas under the curve of 0.817 and 0.795 for readers 1 and 2, respectively. The ROC curves had a different course and crossed each other at a false-positive fraction of 0.33.



View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[Download PPT slide]
 
Figure 8. ROC curves for detection of hemodynamically significant coronary artery stenoses at MR coronary angiography. {circ} = reader 1, {square} = reader 2. Straight line represents the line of chance.

 

    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
In the present study, we used a state-of-the-art 3D MR coronary angiography technique with a real-time navigator to evaluate the presence of significant coronary artery stenoses in a representative group of patients who were clinically suspected of having coronary artery disease and thus referred for conventional coronary angiography. Two patients were excluded because of inadequate MR coronary angiogram quality, so the success rate was 90%. This success rate is comparable to that in previous studies (13,15). However, it should be noted that other surgical interventions, such as coronary artery bypass graft placement and coronary artery stent implantation, might lead to more or fewer severe susceptibility artifacts, which may make these segments uninterpretable. For instance, recurrent stenosis in a coronary artery stent may be missed. Therefore, the potential uses of MR coronary angiography in patients after treatment are more limited.

The overall image quality for the remaining 19 patients was moderate, with close agreement between readers but a wide range of values. Image quality was unpredictable: There were strong variations among patients and between the right and left coronary artery systems. Some patients who were considered good candidates for MR coronary angiography had poor image quality, whereas some who were considered poor candidates had good image quality. Potential explanations for these results are irregularities in heart rhythm or breathing pattern, the patient’s health status (eg, lung emphysema in elderly patients), and/or technical issues such as suitability of the navigator technique for patients. In the present study, although the length of time for the MR coronary angiographic examination was not analyzed statistically, we found no evidence that it affected image quality or that the use of double-oblique imaging planes—in example, for imaging the RCA—negatively affected image quality.

As in previous studies (13,15), the proximal parts of the coronary artery tree were best visualized. This good visualization was owing to the larger size of the proximal parts of the coronary arteries. In addition, the described real-time navigator technique is probably optimized to depict this part of the coronary artery tree. In general, more blurring was noticed in the distal right atrioventricular groove of the RCA. Moreover, only small portions of LCX1 were visible, and the more distal portions of this vessel generally were hardly visible, even in those patients with excellent image quality. The reasons for the poorer visualization of these parts of the coronary artery system are not well understood and may be related to navigator problems, the length of time for image acquisition, complex coronary artery motion patterns, or, in cases of imaging the LCX, the distance to the surface coil. The diameters of the coronary arteries at MR coronary angiography corresponded well with published data (5,6,23).

The main goal of performing MR coronary angiography, aside from the detection of coronary artery anomalies or coronary aneurysms in Kawasaki disease (24,25), is the visualization of coronary atheromatosis. For analysis in the present study, the coronary artery tree depicted at MR coronary angiography was divided into 10 segments, each of which was evaluated for the presence of significant coronary artery stenosis. Although a mean percentage of visualization of 71% of all segments might be disappointing, in the present study, the segments encompassed a much longer part of the coronary arteries as compared with the segments evaluated in most previously published studies (16). In addition, there was excellent agreement, greater than 90%, between the two readers with regard to the visualization of segments, and the {kappa} value was high.

In most studies (26), a 50% reduction in luminal diameter is used to define a hemodynamically significant lesion. In the present study, two of 29 lesions were missed at MR coronary angiography owing to nonvisualizaton of the coronary artery segment. Of the 27 lesions in segments that were visible at MR coronary angiography, only 12 and 15 were correctly diagnosed by readers 1 and 2, respectively; thus, sensitivity was low. Inclusion of the lesions that were in segments that were not visible at MR coronary angiography would have led to a further decrease in sensitivity. These sensitivities are much lower than some of those in previously published studies involving the use of the older two-dimensional MR coronary angiography approach (5) (90%) or 3D MR coronary angiography with a retrospective rather than real-time navigator, a much longer acquisition window (178 msec vs 65 msec) (27), and much lower spatial resolution (1.2 x 2.3 mm vs 0.7 x 1.0 mm) (82%) (15).

The reasons for the lower sensitivities in the present study are unclear. Neither reader, both of whom are well trained in cardiac MR imaging, was involved in performing the MR coronary angiographic examinations or aware of the coronary catheterization (ie, conventional angiography) results. Additionally, all visible coronary artery segments were included in the analysis.

To determine the real value of MR coronary angiography in the detection of coronary artery stenoses, we compared MR coronary angiograms with conventional coronary angiograms on a segmental (ie, proximal, middle, and distal segments) rather than per-coronary-artery or per-patient basis. The latter comparisons yield much higher sensitivities at the expense of specificity. Therefore, we added ROC curves, which are a more efficient way to demonstrate the relationship between sensitivity and specificity. The closer an ROC curve is to the upper left-hand corner of the graph, the more accurate MR coronary angiography is. Poor image quality contributes to low sensitivity values. Furthermore, even with use of optimized MR coronary angiography techniques with a submillimeter in-plane spatial resolution, some lesions may be difficult to detect.

Because the contrast at MR coronary angiography is mainly dependent on T2 relaxation rather than true coronary vessel blood flow, a proximal hyperintense thrombus or occlusion with filling of the coronary artery by collateral vessels can perfectly mask the presence of a coronary artery abnormality. Contrast material–enhanced MR coronary angiography may be appealing, but the clinical role of this examination is not yet established (2830). The specificity and negative predictive values in the present study, however, were much better than the sensitivity values.

The level of agreement between the two readers regarding the presence or absence of coronary artery stenosis appeared to be good (80%). However, the {kappa} value, a better expression of the reliability of measurements because it takes into account the chance of agreement rather than the pure observed agreement, was low (0.35). The closer the {kappa} value is to 1, the better the real agreement between readers is. Thus, in the present study, the low {kappa} value was indicative of poor agreement between the readers: They disagreed on the presence or absence of coronary artery stenosis in 25 segments. Moreover, the difference in the course of ROC curves between readers is indicative of different observation behavior between readers; this means that reader 1 scored better at less strict confidence thresholds, whereas the opposite was true with regard to the scoring behavior of reader 2. Improved MR coronary angiogram image quality is expected to lead to improved ROC curves (ie, {kappa} closer to 1) and better interobserver agreement.

Several limitations need to be mentioned: First, the number of patients included in our study was relatively limited. In a published multicenter trial in which a similar MR coronary angiography technique was used to examine 109 patients from seven different centers, sensitivities that were higher than those in this study but specificities that were lower and accuracies that were slightly lower were reported (16). Moreover, in that study, only the very proximal portions of the coronary arteries were evaluated and the selection criteria for patient inclusion were not well defined.

Second, we evaluated coronary artery stenosis detection on a per-coronary-artery-segment basis but assessed image quality on a per-coronary-artery basis. Although we could not determine the precise relationship between image quality and coronary artery stenosis assessment at MR coronary angiography, in general, the MR coronary angiograms with poor image quality incorrectly depicted the patency status of a higher number of coronary segments than did the MR coronary angiograms with good or excellent image quality. This close relationship has been described by Duerinckx and Urman (6).

Third, the coronary artery segment approach has the advantage that it enables more objective comparisons between readers (eg, with no misinterpretations of segment patency status due to confusion regarding side branches). The length of the segments (ie, 3 cm) was sufficient to minimize the risk of the two readers localizing lesions in different segments. However, lesions crossing segments may be located in different segments by different readers.

Fourth, only major coronary arteries, not the branches, were included in our analysis. Seventy-one percent of the segments of the major coronary arteries depicted at MR coronary angiography were useful for analysis; this percentage of visualization is probably inadequate for routine clinical practice. When we consider the proximal segments only, this visualization increases to almost 100%.

Fifth, the degree of stenosis depicted on conventional coronary angiograms was assessed by using quantitative coronary artery analysis; however, visual grading was used to assess MR coronary angiographic depiction. At present, the submillimeter spatial resolution at MR coronary angiography is suboptimal for exact determination of the degree of arterial stenosis, and this is probably another factor that contributes to the poor sensitivity. For instance, one cannot differentiate a stenosis of just less than 50% from a stenosis of just greater than 50%.

Sixth, a factor that hinders the incorporation of MR coronary angiography into a combined cardiac MR imaging protocol to study other facets, such as myocardial function, perfusion, or late enhancement, is the long total imaging time, which exceeds 15 minutes per MR coronary angiography measurement. Finally, MR coronary angiography yields images of the vessel lumina only; no information on the characteristics of the atherosclerotic plaques is generated. The role of black-blood MR coronary angiography is being investigated (8,31).

In conclusion, the results of the present study of 3D MR coronary angiography with a real-time navigator and submillimeter spatial resolution show that this examination is premature for the detection of significant coronary artery stenoses in the clinical setting. Image quality results are not consistently reliable, and, thus, the overall image quality is inadequate in some patients, and the distal coronary artery segments—namely, the distal segments of the RCA and LAD (ie, >6 cm from origin) and the middle and distal parts of the LCX (ie, >3 cm from origin)—may not be visualized. At present, the sensitivity of commercially available MR coronary angiographic systems for the detection of hemodynamically significant stenoses is too low, mainly because of poor image quality, and there is much observer variability. However, although this technique has poor sensitivity, it has relatively good specificity and thus is potentially useful for the exclusion of significant coronary artery disease in certain patient groups (eg, before valve replacement).


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Ann-Katherine Carton, MS for help in the statistical analysis of the manuscript.


    FOOTNOTES
 
Abbreviations: LAD = left anterior descending coronary artery, LCX = left circumflex coronary artery, LM = left main coronary artery, RCA = right coronary artery, ROC = receiver operating characteristic, TFE = turbo field echo, 3D = three-dimensional

Author contributions: Guarantor of integrity of entire study, J.B.; study concepts, R.K.; study design, S.D., F.E.R.; literature research, J.B., R.B.; clinical studies, R.K., S.D., J.P.; data acquisition, R.B., J.P.; data analysis/interpretation, R.K., J.B., F.E.R., J.P.; statistical analysis, R.K., J.B.; manuscript preparation, J.B.; manuscript definition of intellectual content, J.B., R.K.; manuscript editing, J.B., F.E.R.; manuscript revision/review, R.K.; manuscript final version approval, J.B., F.E.R.


    REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 

  1. Achenbach S, Giesler T, Ropers D, et al. Detection of coronary artery stenoses by contrast-enhanced, retrospectively electrocardiographically-gated, multislice spiral computed tomography. Circulation 2001; 103:2535-2538.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Wielopolski PA, van Geuns RJM, de Feyter PJ, Oudkerk M. Coronary arteries. Eur Radiol 2000; 10:12-35.[CrossRef][Medline]
  3. Paulin S, Von Schulthess GK, Fossel E, Krayenbuehl HP. MR imaging of the aortic root and proximal coronary arteries. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1987; 148:665-670.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  4. Edelman RR, Manning WJ, Burstein D, Paulin S. Coronary arteries: breath-hold MR angiography. Radiology 1991; 181:641-643.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Manning WJ, Li W, Edelman RR. A preliminary report comparing magnetic resonance coronary angiography with conventional angiography. N Engl J Med 1993; 328:828-832.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Duerinckx AJ, Urman MK. Two-dimensional coronary MR angiography: analysis of initial clinical results. Radiology 1994; 193:731-738.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Hundley WG, Hillis D, Hamilton CA, et al. Assessment of coronary arterial stenosis with phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging measurements of coronary flow reserve. Circulation 2000; 101:2375-2381.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  8. Fayad ZA, Fuster V, Fallon JT, et al. Noninvasive in vivo human coronary artery lumen and wall imaging using black-blood magnetic resonance imaging. Circulation 2000; 102:506-510.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  9. Botnar RM, Stuber M, Kissinger KV, Kim WY, Spuentrup E, Manning WJ. Noninvasive coronary vessel wall and plaque imaging with magnetic resonance imaging. Circulation 2000; 102:2582-2587.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  10. Worthley SG, Helft G, Fuster V, et al. Serial in vivo MRI documents arterial remodeling in experimental atherosclerosis. Circulation 2000; 101:586-589.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  11. Wielopolski P, Manning WJ, Edelman RR. Single breath-hold volumetric imaging of the heart using magnetization-prepared 3D segmented echo-planar imaging. J Magn Reson Imaging 1995; 5:403-410.[Medline]
  12. Wielopolski P, van Geuns RJM, de Feyter PJ, Oudkerk M. Breath-hold coronary MR angiography with volume-targeted imaging. Radiology 1998; 209:209-219.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  13. van Geuns RJM, Wielopolski PA, de Bruin HG, et al. MR coronary angiography with breath-hold targeted volumes: preliminary clinical results. Radiology 2000; 217:270-277.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  14. Stuber M, Botnar RM, Danias PG, Kissinger KV, Manning WJ. Submillimeter three-dimensional coronary MR angiography with real-time navigator correction: comparison of navigator location. Radiology 1999; 212:579-587.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  15. Sardanelli F, Molinari G, Zandrino F, Balbi M. Three-dimensional, navigator-echo MR coronary angiography in detecting stenoses of the major epicardial vessels, with conventional coronary angiography as the standard of reference. Radiology 2000; 214:808-814.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  16. Kim WY, Danias PG, Stuber M, et al. Coronary magnetic resonance angiography for the detection of coronary stenoses. N Engl J Med 2001; 345:1863-1869.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  17. Stuber M, Botnar RM, Danias PG, et al. Double-oblique free-breathing high resolution three-dimensional coronary magnetic resonance angiography. J Am Coll Cardiol 1999; 34:524-531.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  18. Botnar RM, Stuber M, Danias PG, Kissinger KV, Manning WJ. Improved coronary artery definition with T2-weighted, free-breathing, three-dimensional coronary MRA. Circulation 1999; 99:3139-3148.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  19. van de Zwet PM, Reiber JH. A new approach for the quantification of complex lesion morphology: the gradient field transform: basic principles and validation results. J Am Coll Cardiol 1994; 24:216-224.[Abstract]
  20. Metz CE. www-radiology.uchicago.edu/krl/toppagell.htm. Accessed 1998.
  21. Metz CE. ROC methodology in radiological imaging. Invest Radiol 1986; 21:720-733.[Medline]
  22. Dawson-Saunders B, Trapp RG. Basic and clinical biostatistics East Norwalk, Conn: Appleton & Lange, 1992; 82-85.
  23. Pennell DJ, Keegan J, Firmin DN, Gatehouse PD, Underwood SR, Longmore DB. Magnetic resonance imaging of coronary arteries: technique and preliminary results. Br Heart J 1993; 70:315-326.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  24. Duerinckx AJ, Bogaert J, Jiang H, Lewis BS. Anomalous origin of the left coronary artery: diagnosis by coronary MR angiography. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1995; 164:1095-1097.[Free Full Text]
  25. Taylor AM, Thorne SA, Rubens MB, et al. Coronary artery imaging in grown up congenital heart disease: complementary role of magnetic resonance and x-ray coronary angiography. Circulation 2000; 101:1670-1678.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  26. Reeder GS, Smith HC, Elveback LR, Mock MB. The angiographic spectrum of coronary artery disease. Cardiovasc Clin 1985; 15:17-31.[Medline]
  27. Wang Y, Vidan E, Bergman GW. Cardiac motion of coronary arteries: variability in the rest period and implications for coronary MR angiography. Radiology 1999; 213:751-758.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  28. Goldfarb JW, Edelman RR. Coronary arteries: breath-hold, gadolinium-enhanced, three-dimensional MR angiography. Radiology 1998; 206:830-834.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  29. Kessler W, Laub G, Achenbach S, Ropers D, Moshage W, Daniel W. Coronary arteries: MR angiography with fast contrast-enhanced three-dimensional breath-hold imaging—initial experience. Radiology 1999; 210:566-572.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  30. Li D, Zheng J, Weinmann HJ. Contrast-enhanced MR imaging of coronary arteries: comparison of intra- and extravascular contrast agents in swine. Radiology 2001; 218:670-678.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  31. Stuber M, Botnar RM, Kissinger KV, Manning WJ. Free-breathing black-blood coronary MR angiography: initial results. Radiology 2001; 219:278-283.[Abstract/Free Full Text]



This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
RadiologyHome page
H. Sakuma, Y. Ichikawa, N. Suzawa, T. Hirano, K. Makino, N. Koyama, M. Van Cauteren, and K. Takeda
Assessment of Coronary Arteries with Total Study Time of Less than 30 Minutes by Using Whole-Heart Coronary MR Angiography
Radiology, October 1, 2005; 237(1): 316 - 321.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Br. J. Radiol.Home page
N M C So, W W M Lam, D Li, A K Y Chan, J E Sanderson, and C Metreweli
Magnetic resonance coronary angiography with 3D TrueFISP: breath-hold versus respiratory gated imaging
Br. J. Radiol., February 1, 2005; 78(926): 116 - 121.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
RadiologyHome page
B. L. Gerber, E. Coche, A. Pasquet, E. Ketelslegers, D. Vancraeynest, C. Grandin, B. E. Van Beers, and J.-L. J. Vanoverschelde
Coronary Artery Stenosis: Direct Comparison of Four-Section Multi-Detector Row CT and 3D Navigator MR Imaging for Detection--Initial Results
Radiology, January 1, 2005; 234(1): 98 - 108.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J Am Coll CardiolHome page
P. G. Danias, A. Roussakis, and J. P.A. Ioannidis
Diagnostic performance of coronary magnetic resonance angiography as compared against conventional x-ray angiography: A meta-analysis
J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., November 2, 2004; 44(9): 1867 - 1876.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
RadiologyHome page
U. J. Schoepf, C. R. Becker, B. M. Ohnesorge, and E. K. Yucel
CT of Coronary Artery Disease
Radiology, July 1, 2004; 232(1): 18 - 37.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Am. J. Roentgenol.Home page
N. A. Obuchowski
How Many Observers Are Needed in Clinical Studies of Medical Imaging?
Am. J. Roentgenol., April 1, 2004; 182(4): 867 - 869.
[Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Figures Only
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow All Versions of this Article:
2263011750v1
226/3/707    most recent
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Bogaert, J.
Right arrow Articles by Rademakers, F. E.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Bogaert, J.
Right arrow Articles by Rademakers, F. E.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
RADIOLOGY RADIOGRAPHICS RSNA JOURNALS ONLINE