Purpose: To assess the effects of cardiovascular-induced motion on conventional DWI of the pancreas and to evaluate motion-robust DWI methods in a motion phantom and healthy volunteers.
Methods: 3T DWI was acquired using standard monopolar and motion-compensated gradient waveforms, including in an anatomically accurate pancreas phantom with controllable compressive motion and healthy volunteers (n = 8, 10). In volunteers, highly controlled single-slice DWI using breath-holding and cardiac gating and whole-pancreas respiratory-triggered DWI were acquired. For each acquisition, the ADC variability across volunteers, as well as ADC differences across parts of the pancreas were evaluated.
Results: In motion phantom scans, conventional DWI led to biased ADC, whereas motion-compensated waveforms produced consistent ADC. In the breath-held, cardiac-triggered study, conventional DWI led to heterogeneous DW signals and highly variable ADC across the pancreas, whereas motion-compensated DWI avoided these artifacts. In the respiratory-triggered study, conventional DWI produced heterogeneous ADC across the pancreas (head: 1756 ± 173 × 10-6 mm2 /s; body: 1530 ± 338 × 10-6 mm2 /s; tail: 1388 ± 267 × 10-6 mm2 /s), with ADCs in the head significantly higher than in the tail (P < .05). Motion-compensated ADC had lower variability across volunteers (head: 1277 ± 102 × 10-6 mm2 /s; body: 1204 ± 169 × 10-6 mm2 /s; tail: 1235 ± 178 × 10-6 mm2 /s), with no significant difference (P ≥ .19) across the pancreas.
Conclusion: Cardiovascular motion introduces artifacts and ADC bias in pancreas DWI, which are addressed by motion-robust DWI.
Keywords: DWI artifacts; cardiovascular compression; compressive motion; diffusion-weighted imaging; pancreas.
© 2021 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.