Evaluation of epilepsy lesion visualisation enhancement in low-field MRI using image quality transfer: a preliminary investigation of clinical potential for applications in developing countries

Author:

Figini MatteoORCID,Lin Hongxiang,D’Arco Felice,Ogbole Godwin,Rossi-Espagnet Maria Camilla,Oyinloye Olalekan Ibukun,Yaria Joseph,Nzeh Donald Amasike,Atalabi Mojisola Omolola,Carmichael David W.,Cross Judith Helen,Lagunju Ikeoluwa,Fernandez-Reyes Delmiro,Alexander Daniel C.

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Low-field (LF) MRI scanners are common in many Low- and middle-Income countries, but they provide images with worse spatial resolution and contrast than high-field (HF) scanners. Image Quality Transfer (IQT) is a machine learning framework to enhance images based on high-quality references that has recently adapted to LF MRI. In this study we aim to assess if it can improve lesion visualisation compared to LF MRI scans in children with epilepsy. Methods T1-weighted, T2-weighted and FLAIR were acquired from 12 patients (5 to 18 years old, 7 males) with clinical diagnosis of intractable epilepsy on a 0.36T (LF) and a 1.5T scanner (HF). LF images were enhanced with IQT. Seven radiologists blindly evaluated the differentiation between normal grey matter (GM) and white matter (WM) and the extension and definition of epileptogenic lesions in LF, HF and IQT-enhanced images. Results When images were evaluated independently, GM-WM differentiation scores of IQT outputs were 26% higher, 17% higher and 12% lower than LF for T1, T2 and FLAIR. Lesion definition scores were 8–34% lower than LF, but became 3% higher than LF for FLAIR and T1 when images were seen side by side. Radiologists with expertise at HF scored IQT images higher than those with expertise at LF. Conclusion IQT generally improved the image quality assessments. Evaluation of pathology on IQT-enhanced images was affected by familiarity with HF/IQT image appearance. These preliminary results show that IQT could have an important impact on neuroradiology practice where HF MRI is not available.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China-Xinjiang Joint Fund

UCLH Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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