3D Chemical Exchange Saturation Transfer MR Imaging of In Vivo Human Knee Cartilage Glycosaminoglycan at 7T Guruprasad Krishnamoorthy1,2 , Puneet Bagga1, Hari Hariharan1, Ravinder Reddy1 1Center for Magnetic Resonance and Optical imaging, Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania 2School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems, Drexel university Materials and Methods Abstract Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative disease affecting molecular composition of Five healthy volunteers of age 32.8 ± 14 yrs underwent MRI at whole body 7T scanner (Siemens cartilage of Knee. Early detection of OA is critical for preventing the progression and reversing Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany) using a 28-channel Knee Coil (Quality Electrodynamics, OH, USA). the course of the disease when the cost of the treatment is low and treatment success rate is Three volunteers were scanned twice to determine reproducibility much higher. Early stage of OA is associated with the loss of Glycosaminoglycan which are side Results A 1 B 2 1 2 A new 3D gagCEST sequence has been developed as shown in the figure below. The preparation 20 block consists of a CEST preparation. Readout is done with very low flip (~5°) angle spoiled available non-invasive methods to measure PG have limitations in either specificity, sensitivity or Gradient echo segments (~600 per shot with a GRAPPA factor of 2 along phase encoding direction) spatial resolution. A recently developed method known as Chemical Exchange Saturation to obtain rapid 3D images Pulse Cluster method is highly specific to Glycosaminoglycan (GAG), current implementation of this method is 16 Readout (Cartesian 3D GRE) CEST Preparation 14 T1 Recovery Delay based on single slice, time intensive and not conducive for routine evaluation of patients. In this Duration 0–5s 5–8s 0-3s study, a novel 3D / multi-slice gagCEST imaging technique is developed to image PG of human knee cartilages in a practically achievable scan time with reproducible results at 7T MRI 12 10 gagCEST% Transfer imaging of Glycosaminoglycan (gagCEST) images PG non-invasively. While this 18 gagCEST% chains of Proteoglycan (PG) molecules from the Extracellular Matrix of cartilage. Currently 8 Elliptical center encoding strategy was used for the phase-slice encode plane. Using this view 6 ordering and ‘burst mode’ shots strategy, high throughput rate (>80%) for readout is achieved. Background Briefly, gagCEST technique selectively saturates the exchangeable hydroxyl protons of GAG by 4 Imaging parameters the application of radio frequency (RF) pulse; the saturated protons of GAG exchange with protons of bulk water leads to a reduced of bulk water signal, which is concentration dependent 140 mm FOV with 0.6X0.6X3 mm3 resolution for 234X234X16 matrix size. 2 TR/TE = 7.5/3 msec with 5° flip angle, 2 shots with 8sec shot TR , GRAPPA factor = 2 0 Figure: B1 GRE => 30° and 60 ° flip angle method, without GRAPPA A. 3D Multi-slice gagCEST maps of cartilages of a healthy young volunteer WASSR B0map => 200 msec duration with 20 Hz power for 0:0.1:0.8 ppm offsets gagCEST => 500 msec duration for 0.2:0.1:1.8 ppm offsets (1ppm center for gag) B. gagCEST maps of 65-year old subject with knee pain showing reduced patellar cartilage thickness and gagCEST values. 1. Axial orientation showing patellar cartilage 2. Coronal orientation showing Femoral (on top) and Tibial cartilages Results (contd.) Note: The gagCEST maps are overlaid on anatomical image and cropped A Sherry, Woods, 2008 Conclusion B Figure: gagCEST values of healthy Medial Where, Msat( ±Δω) are B0 corrected CEST images acquired at ±1 ppm from water resonance. Mcntl can either be M0 i.e., -20ppm or Msat(- Δω) ie., -1ppm Lateral 20 % gagCEST Msat −∆ω − Msat(+∆ω) gagCESTasym = 100 ∗ Mcntl Medial 6 cartilages of different compartments 4 of knee 4 2 A. M-ve Normalized 0 0 16 12 8 Patellar Femoral Tibial Patellar A Ling et al, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 2008;105(7):2266-2270 Singh A et al, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 2012;68(2):588-594 Krusche-Mandl I et al, Osteoarthritis and Cartilage. 5// 2012;20(5):357-363 Varma G et al, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 2012;68(4):1228-1233 Singh A et al, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 2013;69(3):818-824 Kogan F et al, Current Radiology Reports. 2013/06/01 2013;1(2):102-114. Liu G et al, NMR in Biomedicine. 2013;26(7):810-828. Wei W et al, Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 1// 2014;32(1):41-47. Retest - % gagCEST 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Femoral We have developed a highly reproducible MRI technique to quantify GAG at a practically achievable scan time Figure: Intra-Subject reproducibility 8 To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study reporting 3D multi-slice gagCEST of various compartments of human knee at 7T B. M0 Normalized Tibial B 20 References: volunteers calculated from Lateral 8 There has been a lot of interests shown by doctors and pharmaceutical industry to diagnose the health of cartilage non-invasively to determine patient response to a of the proposed technique. 16 ICC = 0.949* ICC = 0.948* 6 particular drug under development A. M-ve Normalized 12 B. M0 Normalized 4 Work is in progress to evaluate more healthy subjects and patients with Knee pain 8 Note: Intra-class correlation(ICC) 2 4 above 0.9 shows that the technique 0 0 0 4 8 12 16 Test - % gagCEST 20 0 2 4 6 Test - % gagCEST 8 is highly reproducible Acknowledgements: This work is supported by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering under award number P41-EB015893