Imaging Protocol
The first step is high-quality tissue imaging using a 2D
gradient-echo sequence and a single dose of gadolinium contrast. On
the first-pass postgadolinium image, we look for the presence of
contrast in the portal veins and a lack of contrast in the hepatic
veins (Figure 1, top left). Approximately 60 to 90 seconds after
the contrast injection, we image with fat suppression (Figure 1,
bottom right), looking specifically look for such abnormalities as
peritoneal disease, capsule-based disease of the liver, and certain
neoplasms such as cholangiocarcinoma, which are well visualized on
delayed imaging.
Approximately 15 to 20 minutes after the initial injection of
gadolinium, we do high-definition MR angiography, using a 3D
gradient-echo sequence and, typically, 20 mL of contrast (Figure
2). We routinely use power injection at a rate of 2 mL/sec. At that
rate, the temporal resolution is good and it is possible to capture
the hepatic arterial dominant phase, as well as specific
enhancement characteristics of liver lesions.
Magnetic resonance angiography is especially useful when imaging
patients with vascular anomalies. Figure 3 is an example of a
replaced right hepatic artery. The source image on the top left
shows the left hepatic artery arising from the celiac artery. The
source image on the bottom left shows the take-off of the replaced
right hepatic artery from the superior mesenteric artery, and a
distal branch of the right hepatic artery. The combined multiple
intensity projection (MIP) image shows both the left hepatic artery
coming off the celiac artery, and a portion of the replaced right
hepatic artery.
Detection and characterization
Although little has been reported or written about the
theoretical roles for high-dose gadolinium MRI of the liver, its
potential to improve the detection and characterization of liver
lesions is very intriguing. One of the few reports on this topic
came from Taupitz et al from the Charité University in Berlin. In
2000, they found that double-dose gadolinium contrast
administration improved the definition of both enhancing nodules
and the progression of enhancement in small hemangiomas when
compared with single-dose contrast administration (M. Taupitz,
personal communication). This finding may be important, as correct
characterization of liver lesions is an essential part of
evaluating patients with malignant disease.
3-5
Double-dose contrast may be useful in improving characterization of
lesions, such as hemangiomas, in patients being evaluated for
possible malignancy.
5
High-dose gadolinium contrast may also be of value in improving
lesion detection, particularly in assessing malignant lesions that
are amenable to resection or other local therapy. The two most
important of these lesions are colon cancer liver metastases, which
typically are hypovascular, and hepatocellular carcinoma, which
typically is hypervascular.
4
In imaging hypovascular colon cancer metastases, high-dose
gadolinium contrast may improve the conspicuity of lesions by
increasing enhancement of the ring. Appreciating ring enhancement
is the single most important evaluation to make in correctly
characterizing metastatic colon cancer metastases
3,4
(Figure 4). Often, enhancement is best on delayed imaging, 90
seconds after contrast administration.
It is relatively easy to evaluate large lesions with a
combination of T2-weighted, T1-weighted, and early and delayed
postcontrast imaging. High-dose contrast, therefore, is likely to
be most important in detecting small lesions, a crucial factor in
selecting the type of therapy that is most appropriate for each
patient.
In hepatocellular carcinoma, the tumors are usually small and
hypervascular. Often, however, they must be imaged on the
background of a heterogeneously enhancing cirrhotic liver. Although
such lesions can be very difficult to see on precontrast T2- and
T1-weighted images, they are easily appreciated on immediate
post-gadolinium images.
6
The appearance of hepatocellular carcinoma as hyperintense lesions
immediately following contrast administration once again raises the
possibility that high-dose gadolinium studies may improve lesion
detection and help guide patient management.
Figure 5 shows a typical small hepatocellular carcinoma. On
T2-weighted precontrast imaging, it is difficult to appreciate the
lesion at all, although it is slightly hyperintense on the
T1-weighted sequences. On immediate post-gadolinium images,
hepatocellular carcinoma shows very intense enhancement, surrounded
by a hypoenhancing capsule around the lesion. On delayed
post-contrast images, we appreciate rapid washout of the lesion and
late capsular enhancement, which are very specific for
hepatocellular carcinoma.
Pancreatic Imaging
In pancreatic imaging, just as in hepatic imaging, high-dose
gadolinium contrast studies have the potential to improve the
detection of both hypovascular and hypervascular lesions. For
example, we would expect better definition of small hypovascular
pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas by showing improved enhancement
of the surrounding pancreas.
We would expect even more consistently positive results when
high-dose gadolinium contrast is used in the imaging of islet cell
tumors, insulinomas in particular. These tumors are initially very
small, in the range of 1 to 2 cm, and can be difficult to detect.
It is likely that the use of high-dose gadolinium contrast media
will improve the detection of small insulinomas, but this needs to
be demonstrated in clinical studies.
Conclusion
High-dose gadolinium contrast plays a small role in hepatic and
pancreatic imaging today. We use it primarily in studies that
combine tissue imaging with MRA, but it is also valuable for the
evaluation of 2 different organ systems in the same study. For
example, high-dose gadolinium is useful when examining the liver,
followed by MRA of the renal arteries.
In the future, high-dose contrast-enhanced MRI may fill a much
larger and more important clinical role in the evaluation of
malignant disease, enabling better detection and characterization
of cancerous lesions in patients who are being considered for
surgical management. Controlled clinical studies comparing low- and
high-dose contrast MRI, as well as high-dose contrast-enhanced MRI
and other imaging modalities, such as CT, are now needed to
determine whether this potential will become a reality. *
Discussion
TG:
Thank you very much for an excellent presentation. We have some
time for discussion. Dr. Kramer?
LK:
Can you distinguish between doses; that is, quantity of contrast
versus injection rate, in trying to define margins, and having
greater sensitivity?
RS:
That's a good question. At this point in time, since most of the
work that we've done has been with single-dose contrast, most
people have been focusing on contrast injection rates. In the past,
we used hand injection, and now we routinely use machine power
injection at 2 mL/sec. At that rate, we have fairly good temporal
resolution that we can get very nicely. We can capture the hepatic
arterial dominant phase, and also the specific enhancement
characteristics of liver lesions.
Going with a higher dose, I think we would still have to at
least match that ejection rate. It's very important to maintain
that very early enhancement, the hepatic arterial dominant phase.
So with higher dose, it will still be very essential. We can't get
away from fast injections. I think if anything, there may be more
importance attached to fast injections.
HR:
I had a question about your approach, which is dynamic in the sense
of over several minutes, and is mostly driven by morphologic
characteristics. Do you think there is any potential for parametric
imaging of the earliest wash-in phases, washout of some of these
lesions, region of interest, or maps as we've seen for brain or
breast?
RS:
Yes, I think that at this point in time I haven't appreciated that
that is important. The reason is that in the liver, there are very
specific enhancement characteristics. So we don't have to resort to
temporal handling of contrast, because the various benign lesions
and malignant lesions have very specific morphologic features in
how they enhance. It's a very interesting topic for the same
reasons that it's interesting in the brain and the breasts, in that
angiogenesis and the pattern of blood supply, is crucial. But I
think we have the advantage that there's better morphologic
characteristics of the various liver lesions, so we haven't had to
rely on dynamic handling or looking at enhancement rates and so on.
But, as with many things, you borrow from one area to go to the
next. One of the nice things about the relationship between brain
and body imaging is that, generally speaking, many of the
advancements have first come in imaging the brain. Then as things
have become well developed in the brain, then other applications,
like body, have developed. So it's interesting to see if the
various approaches that are used in the brain can also be
translated into, for instance, liver imaging. I think that may be
very intriguing.
DR:
I'd like to comment on that. I think we probably will see that
coming, because just this year there was a paper showing that the
risk of recurrence of hepatoma was a function of microvessel
density, which we can probe with our dynamic contrast-enhanced
methods. Therefore, we may not only have the ability to provide a
specific diagnosis, but also to provide an estimate of prognosis or
recurrence. So, these are intriguing functional methods that I
think we are going to see applied more frequently to the liver in
the future.
RS:
Right, and along the same lines as angiogenesis, I think what is
also very important is the response to various treatment methods.
In those settings, looking at the different patterns of
enhancement, different rates of enhancement may prove very
important. So we're now starting a number of different studies,
looking at angiogenic qualities of metastases, following
chemotherapy and how it alters. I think that may be where
physiologic information will become important.
MP:
In the double-injection scheme, where you want to do some lesion
characterization followed by vascular depiction, is there any
effect from the first injection on the second injection that either
makes it better or worse?
RS:
Well, I think there certainly is some effect of the first injection
on the second. But we've generally found that, most often, those
kinds of effects are also worse. But we found that by waiting
approximately 15 minutes, that enough of the gadolinium has left
the system that there isn't much of an impact on the MRA. In
addition, since we routinely now look at the images on PACS, and we
page the source images, we found that the presence of contrast
hanging around another structure becomes less important than it had
been in the past, when we weren't using the PACS system. In fact,
in some areas, as I think Martin may have shown, it may in effect
be of some interest that you can see at 15, 20 minutes contrast in
the renal collecting system. So you can use that as further
information on how the renal collecting system appears. So that is
the one positive thing that we've observed in that approach.
RL:
You certainly have the option of retracting if it were a
problem.
LK:
We're doing more and more CTAs at our institution. We're picking up
more and more asymptomatic liver metastases. After we do that, we
go back and we get a conventional imaging study. In a lot of cases,
it's MR, and we do it according to our standard protocols. We're
not finding those metastases. We are now using the
second-generation multidetector CTs with very high doses, and very
rapid administrations of contrast. I suspect that you're correct,
in that we may have to look at higher doses of gadolinium at higher
rates of injection. But right now we don't have a lot of data on
that. If we decide today to double the dose of contrast, are we
doing research or is it practical non-research to go ahead and do
right now?
RS:
My approach is that you really have to show that there is a value.
It is probably necessary to identify initial studies involving
patients who have lesions already demonstrated on single dose, and
then administer a double dose and compare the images. I think a
perfect patient population for that are those with hepatocellular
carcinoma, because it is quite often multifocal. I think that's a
great way to evaluate initially, to see if it really is doing
empirically what we think it should do, which is improving the
demonstration of lesions.
I think, though, that the comparison between CT and MR always
enters everything. When you talk about doing CTA, of course you
could also do MRA for evaluating hepatic injection on MR rather
than on CT. I think one of the compelling things that Martin said
is that MR is fundamentally a much safer modality, that will always
be the case, and the contrast agent is much safer.
We haven't compared it with CTA. But we've compared MR to CTAP.
In fact, we stopped doing CTAP mainly because of the higher
specificity of MR using the kind of protocol we're using. But I
think you're right, insofar as if you are going to be looking at
absolute detection of every lesion, you have to do something
different. So either go with the interarterial injection on MR or
start with higher doses and see if that makes a difference. I
always prefer being noninvasive or less invasive to start with. It
may be a good starting point to compare CTA with high-dose
gadolinium, and look at patients with liver metastases who are
being considered for surgical resection.