Purpose: MP2RAGE parameter optimization is redefined to allow more time-efficient MR acquisitions, whereas the T1 -based synthetic imaging framework is used to obtain on-demand T1 -weighted contrasts. Our aim was to validate this concept on healthy volunteers and patients with multiple sclerosis, using plug-and-play parallel-transmission brain imaging at 7 T.
Methods: A "time-efficient" MP2RAGE sequence was designed with optimized parameters including TI and TR set as small as possible. Extended phase graph formalism was used to set flip-angle values to maximize the gray-to-white-matter contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Several synthetic contrasts (UNI, EDGE, FGATIR, FLAWSMIN , FLAWSHCO ) were generated online based on the acquired T1 maps. Experimental validation was performed on 4 healthy volunteers at various spatial resolutions. Clinical applicability was evaluated on 6 patients with multiple sclerosis, scanned with both time-efficient and conventional MP2RAGE parameterizations.
Results: The proposed time-efficient MP2RAGE protocols reduced acquisition time by 40%, 30%, and 19% for brain imaging at (1 mm)3 , (0.80 mm)3 and (0.65 mm)3 , respectively, when compared with conventional parameterizations. They also provided all synthetic contrasts and comparable contrast-to-noise ratio on UNI images. The flexibility in parameter selection allowed us to obtain a whole-brain (0.45 mm)3 acquisition in 19 min 56 s. On patients with multiple sclerosis, a (0.67 mm)3 time-efficient acquisition enhanced cortical lesion visualization compared with a conventional (0.80 mm)3 protocol, while decreasing the scan time by 15%.
Conclusion: The proposed optimization, associated with T1 -based synthetic contrasts, enabled substantial decrease of the acquisition time or higher spatial resolution scans for a given time budget, while generating all typical brain contrasts derived from MP2RAGE.
Keywords: 7 T; FLAWS; MP2RAGE; multiple sclerosis; parallel transmission; synthetic MRI.
© 2023 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.