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Endocrine Abstracts (2023) 98 C37 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.98.C37

1University of California San Francisco, 2Siemens Healthineers


Background: 0.55T MRI is a new MRI technology offering increased patient accessibility with a wider bore (80cm) and reduced acoustic noise. We compared the sensitivity of liver metastases detection on gadoxetate-enhanced 0.55T MRI to 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT while evaluating patient experience.

Methods: Nine patients with neuroendocrine liver metastases were imaged using gadoxetate-enhanced 0.55T MRI (MAGNETOM Free.Max, Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany). Eight patients also received 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT and five received 3.0T MRIs for comparison. The presence of liver metastases was assessed on CT, PET from PET/CT, diffusion weighted imaging (DWI), and hepatobiliary phase imaging (HBP), and positivity rates were compared. Up to five lesions measuring under 1 cm and five over 1cm per patient were included for analysis. Maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmax) of DOTATATE PET/CT were determined. Sound pressure level (SPLmax) of DWI and HBP were measured at 0.55T and 3.0T by placing a decibel meter 2m from each magnet’s front panel and SLPmax was calculated over five repetitions.

Results: Nine patients (average age 63 [5 female, age range 47-75]) with 69 total liver lesions were successfully imaged at 0.55T MRI. 63 lesions were visualized at 0.55T and 42 were seen on DOTATATE PET/CT. Mean SUVmax of hepatic lesions was 18.7 ± 10.5 on DOTATATE PET/CT. HBP and DWI at 0.55T had increased detection of liver metastases over DOTATATE PET/CT. Qualitatively, HBP was superior on 0.55T compared to 3.0T for 4/5 patients.Table 1. Sensitivity for the detection of liver lesions by imaging technique broken down by lesion size.SPLmax was significantly lower for DWI and HBP sequences on a 0.55T system (DWI 76.3 ± 0.6 dB, HBP 78.5 ± 1.1 dB) compared to a 3.0T system (DWI 86.6 ± 1.1 dB, HBP 90.5 ± 1.3 dB) (p value < 0.0001).

Table 1 Sensitivity for the detection of liver lesions by imaging technique broken down by lesion size.
0-1cm>1cmTotal
0.55T HBP88%100%94%
0.55T DWI85%94%90%
3.0T HBP89%100%94%
CT44%82%65%
DOTATATE PET67%75%71%

Conclusion: Routine imaging of patients with neuroendocrine tumor metastases is feasible at 0.55T with HBP imaging showing an increased detection rate for hepatic metastases compared to 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT. Low-field MR imaging has potential to improve patient experience without sacrificing diagnostic capability.

Abstract ID 23759

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