A prospective intra-individual study to compare the image quality of magnetic resonance (MR) pancreatography at 3.0 T and 1.5 T in patients with autoimmune pancreatitis.
Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is a unique form of chronic pancreatitis caused by an autoimmune mechanism that responds well to steroid therapy. One of the most important issues on AIP is to distinguish it from pancreatic cancer as the treatments are totally different from each other. An accurate differentiation of AIP from pancreatic cancer is therefore crucial. Two most important image findings of AIP are pancreatic enlargement and pancreatic ductal stricture. When CT shows typical diffuse sausage-like swelling of the pancreas and peripancreatic hypodense rim, it is easy to differentiate AIP from pancreatic cancer. However, those typical cases are not very common and, moreover, 30% of AIP manifest as focal mass/enlargement of the pancreas, making a differential diagnosis very difficult. When pancreatic feature is atypical at CT, it is important to find diffuse or multifocal stricture of the main pancreatic duct that is characteristic feature of AIP. In AIP, a diffusely attenuated pancreatic duct is thinner than normal, and this does not appear at CT. Pancreatography is therefore necessary. Two current imaging tools to demonstrate the pancreatic duct are endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (ERP) and MR pancreatography (MRP). ERP provides high resolution images using different projections and enables various procedures including aspiration/biopsy and stent insertion. However, the use of diagnostic ERP in diagnosing AIP has been debated as ERP is an invasive procedure, having potential complications including pancreatitis, perforation of the stomach or duodenum. Moreover, it is difficult to perform endoscopic procedure in patients who underwent gastric surgery. Whereas, MRP can noninvasively image the pancreatic and biliary systems at the same time without risks of procedure-related complications and can evaluate other intrabdominal organs on cross-sectional images. The relatively lower spatial resolution of MRP using 1.5 T compared with ERP images may make it difficult to demonstrate fine changes of the pancreatic duct in AIP and sometimes make false positive or negative findings. The superiority of 3.0 T over 1.5 T MR systems has been observed in several studies. However, only a few studies using the 3.0 T MR systems in the pancreaticobiliary tract have been reported and, furthermore, the usefulness of 3.0 T MRP for the diagnosis of AIP has not yet been investigated. The purpose of this study is to prospectively compare the image quality of MRP at 3.0 T and 1.5 T in patients with AIP using ERP as the reference standard.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
30
Division of Abdomen, Department of Radiology & Research Institute of Radiology, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center
Seoul, South Korea
Scoring for visualization of the main pancreatic duct on 1.5 T and 3.0 T MRP
1. Scoring for overall visualization of the main pancreatic duct (MPD): 1-4 points (1, entirely invisible; 2, faintly and partially visible; 3, faintly but entirely visible/clearly but partially visible; 4, clearly and entirely visible) 2. Scoring for visualization of MPD stricture: 1-4 points (1, invisible; 2, poorly visible; 3, moderately visible; 4, clearly visible) * Reference standard: ERP
Time frame: Outcome measure will be assessed after a week following MRP examination
Signal-to-noise ratio of the main pancreatic duct on 1.5 T and 3.0 T MRP
Time frame: Outcome measure will be assessed after a week following MRP examination
The rate of concordance in the stricture type of the main pancreatic duct between MRP and ERP
Stricture type of the main pancreatic duct: 1, diffuse; 2, segmental; 3, focal; 4, multifocal
Time frame: Outcome measure will be assessed after a week following MRP examination
Scoring for confidence in diagnosing AIP based on MRP findings
Scoring for confidence: 1-4 points (1, low probability; 2, indeterminate probability; 3, moderate probability; 4, high probability)
Time frame: Outcome measure will be assessed after a week following MRP examination
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