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    In: Medical Physics, Wiley, Vol. 41, No. 11 ( 2014-11)
    Abstract: To correlate T 1‐weighted ( T 1w) magnetic resonance (MR) image contrast around a cryoablation iceball with temperature in a phantom study and to compare this to its in vivo appearance during MR‐guided focal cryoablation of prostate cancer. Methods: A MR‐compatible cryoneedle was inserted into identical gel phantoms ( n = 3) on a 1.5 T MR system. Two fiber‐optic temperature sensors were placed parallel to the needle. A fast 3D T 1w gradient echo (GRE) sequence (TR/TE/FA = 4.81/1.98/6°) was used to monitor iceball progression. Normalized signal intensity (SI) was correlated with temperature. The same T 1w sequence was used during MR‐guided prostate cryoablation in ten consecutive patients at the authors’ institution. In vivo findings were quantitatively compared to the phantom data. Results: In the phantom study, the cryoablation iceball appeared in the T 1w MR images as a sharply delineated signal void. A 2.2 ± 0.2 mm wide hyperintense rim directly surrounded the iceball at cooled but nonfreezing temperatures ( 〈 20 °C) in the gel. Normalized SI was maximum at 8.4 ± 2.4 °C, showing a 35.6%–43.0% (mean 40.5%) increase with respect to baseline before cooling. In the clinical procedures, the same image contrast was observed in vivo in all patients. In vivo , width of the hyperintense rim was 1.6 ± 0.6 mm. Normalized SI increases with respect to nontreated prostate ranged 28.4%–55.6% (mean 36.8%). On quantitative analysis, normalized SI changes along a linear region of interest from surrounding tissue onto the iceball center were similar between the patients and phantom setting (root mean square difference 0.06). Conclusions: The hyperintense rim around the iceball in fast T 1w GRE images corresponded to cooled but nonfreezing temperatures ( 〈 20 °C) proximal to the frozen zone. The same image contrast was observed both in a phantom study as well as in vivo in the human prostate during cryotherapy. Potentially, monitoring of this rim could be useful in order to maintain a safe margin from at‐risk tissues during MR‐guided prostate cryoablation procedures.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0094-2405 , 2473-4209
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2014
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1466421-5
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