Next Article in Journal
Surveillance for Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with NASH
Next Article in Special Issue
The Role of Proteomics in Biomarker Development for Improved Patient Diagnosis and Clinical Decision Making in Prostate Cancer
Previous Article in Journal
Improving the Sensitivity and Functionality of Mobile Webcam-Based Fluorescence Detectors for Point-of-Care Diagnostics in Global Health
Previous Article in Special Issue
When Prostate Cancer Circulates in the Bloodstream
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Review

Limitations and Prospects for Diffusion-Weighted MRI of the Prostate

by
Roger Bourne
1,*,† and
Eleftheria Panagiotaki
2,†
1
Discipline of Medical Radiation Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
2
Centre for Medical Image Computing, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Diagnostics 2016, 6(2), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics6020021
Submission received: 29 April 2016 / Revised: 23 May 2016 / Accepted: 23 May 2016 / Published: 27 May 2016
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Prostate Cancer Diagnosis)

Abstract

:
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is the most effective component of the modern multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) scan for prostate pathology. DWI provides the strongest prediction of cancer volume, and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) correlates moderately with Gleason grade. Notwithstanding the demonstrated cancer assessment value of DWI, the standard measurement and signal analysis methods are based on a model of water diffusion dynamics that is well known to be invalid in human tissue. This review describes the biophysical limitations of the DWI component of the current standard mpMRI protocol and the potential for significantly improved cancer assessment performance based on more sophisticated measurement and signal modeling techniques.

1. Introduction

Prostate cancer is estimated to account for the deaths of 30,000 Western men annually [1]; however, many forms of prostate cancer are indolent and do not require treatment. Using only traditional assessment techniques it remains unclear and controversial as to which men require aggressive treatment and what form it should take. While the tumour’s grade and volume are the best indicators of malignancy, and thus the need for intervention, at present these can only be reliably measured after surgical removal of the prostate [2,3,4]. Transrectal ultrasound guided (TRUS) biopsy, the standard diagnostic method, has low sensitivity and often underestimates malignancy [5,6,7]. Prostate specific antigen (PSA) screening has increased the rate of prostate cancer detection but resulted in a large number of men with clinically insignificant disease undergoing unnecessary treatment [8,9]. Treating insignificant prostate cancer inflicts otherwise avoidable pain, stress, cost, and complications including impotence and incontinence. There is now a significant discrepancy between the potential of localized therapy and the targeting information available on disease localization. A recent report describes real time motion-compensated delivery of a radiotherapy beam with precision better than 1 mm [10]. Unfortunately, for prostate cancer patients, there is currently no correspondingly precise tumour imaging technique to plan the focal or boosted dose delivery which would maximize treatment effect while causing minimum harm to uninvolved tissues within and adjacent to the prostate.

2. Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging (mpMRI)

2.1. mpMRI and Prostate Cancer

Better pretreatment imaging of prostate cancer is critical to reducing unnecessary treatment of insignificant disease while improving the effectiveness and minimizing the harm of interventions. The current best imaging method, multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI), is increasingly being used to target biopsies, assess risk, and select treatment. The mpMRI protocol comprises three independent scans with distinct image contrast mechanisms. Each scan depends on a particular property of tissue water: (1) T2 on the molecular environment of the water; (2) dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) on blood flow and vessel wall permeability; and (3) DWI on tissue microstructure [11,12,13]. Radiologists interpret the T2, DCE, and DWI scans to report on the probable amount and location of any cancer. The PI-RADSTM reporting standard [14] aims to minimize image interpretation subjectivity, and there are UK and European consensus statements relating to standardization of imaging method [15,16].

2.2. The Role of Diffusion-Weighted Imaging in mpMRI

The DWI component of the mpMRI scan has far stronger correlations with both cancer grade and volume than T2 and DCE [17,18,19]. This superior performance of DWI relates to the direct dependence of image contrast on differences in the rate of diffusion of water molecules due to tissue microstructure changes. Cancer-associated changes (including the number, size, type, and arrangement of cells) significantly alter the water diffusion behavior. The common categorization of DWI as a ‘functional’ imaging technique is an unfortunate misnomer—no other MRI contrast mechanism is more closely related to tissue structure.

3. What is DWI Measuring?

3.1. Diffusion-Sensitization of the MRI Signal

The basic DWI method produces a signal that is dependent on the average water molecule displacement over a specific time interval in a direction defined by a pair of ‘diffusion-sensitizing’ magnetic field gradients [20]. Larger average displacements within a voxel (measurement volume element) result in greater DWI signal attenuation. The displacement sensitivity of the DWI measurement can be increased either by increasing the time interval between the diffusion-sensitizing gradients (the ‘effective diffusion time’), or by increasing the strength of the gradients. These two independent imaging method parameters are commonly combined and expressed as the diffusion-weighting or ‘b-factor’ (or b-value).
Depending on the measurement technique, signal attenuation may result from both ‘true’ diffusion (Brownian thermal motion) and flow due to tissue perfusion. The recommended mpMRI protocols [15,16] aim to minimize perfusion effects so that the image contrast relates primarily to the way the tissue microstructure hinders and restricts thermal diffusion. Structurally dense tissue (typical of solid non-necrotic tumours) appear brighter in the diffusion-weighted image than normal tissues with relatively loosely packed cells and an open extracellular matrix. By performing multiple measurements with an array of diffusion-sensitizing gradient orientations the presence and degree of diffusion anisotropy (preferential diffusion in a particular direction) can be quantified. Post-processing of anisotropy data from multiple voxels in a 3D volume enables the mapping and visualization of fiber tracts.
An important but often neglected feature of DWI is the sensitivity to tissue structure on multiple spatial scales. Depending on the time interval of the diffusion-weighted measurement each water molecule is likely to ‘explore’ a larger or smaller range of spatial scales of the tissue microstructure. For long diffusion times structure heterogeneity on the smallest spatial scales will be averaged out and the signal attenuation will depend primarily on large scale tissue structure features. Conversely, at the short time limit there are minimal interactions with the tissue structure and molecular displacement has the Gaussian probability distribution of unhindered Brownian motion. For clinical DWI scans typical diffusion times are around 40–80 ms, corresponding to an unhindered unrestricted mean diffusive water displacement of about 30 μm. By assessing the dependence of signal attenuation on diffusion time it is possible to estimate the dimensions of restricting structures.
The direct dependence of water mobility on the tissue microstructural environment means DWI is sensitive to the arrangement, type, geometry, and permeability of cells at the micron scale—key characteristics that correlate with cancer malignancy.

3.2. Signal Models

The inference of specific tissue structure changes from DWI measurements presents a significant and only partially tractable inverse problem. While it is well established that tissue microstructure affects molecular diffusion dynamics, and hence the degree of attenuation of a diffusion-weighted MRI signal, many different tissue structures could potentially lead to the same average water molecule displacement and the same DWI signal. The number of solutions to this inverse problem, and thus the sensitivity and specificity for pathology detection, depends on the information content of the DWI measurement (the data acquisition method) and the ability of the signal analysis model to extract this information (the data processing method).
DWI signal models can be categorized broadly as either phenomenological or structural. Phenomenological models aim for a reliable mathematical description of the DWI signal attenuation as a function of increasing diffusion weighting. Structure-based models predict the DWI signal attenuation based on calculated or simulated diffusion dynamics in one or several structural compartments. The recent historical trend is towards structure-based models as, ideally, the model parameters correspond directly to diagnostic tissue structural features. At present the recommended DWI protocol for prostate mpMRI uses only the very simple phenomenological ‘ADC’ model.

4. Limitations of the Standard ‘Apparent Diffusion Coefficient’ (ADC) Model

4.1. The ‘Apparent Diffusion Coefficient’ (ADC)

Cancer detection and characterization using clinical DWI methods is currently almost exclusively based on a model that assumes a Gaussian displacement probability for water and a consequent monoexponential decay of the DWI signal (S) with increasing diffusion weighting (b).
S = S 0 e D b
where D is the water self-diffusion coefficient. Because tissue constitutes a highly heterogeneous diffusion environment and the displacement probability is generally non-Gaussian, D is conventionally replaced by ADCan apparent diffusion coefficient. The use of the indefinite article ‘an’ here is important. The calculated value of ADC may be strongly dependent on both the DWI measurement protocol and the model fitting method, although this is generally not recognized in the radiology literature [21].
The monexponential ADC model is the simplest possible description of DWI signal behavior, and thus a very poor solution to the inverse problem of assessing tissue structure from a DWI measurement. Calculation of a tissue ADC map provides a semi-quantitative assessment of gross variations in water diffusion dynamics due to factors that may include cell density, size, shape, permeability, subcellular architecture, extracellular matrix, and perfusion effects. The dependence of ADC on a variety of histological features simultaneously means it lacks biological specificity.
Despite its simplicity the ADC model performs well compared with other MRI contrast methods for prostate cancer detection and grading. There is a moderate negative correlation between ADC and cancer Gleason grade [22,23], and ADC correlates more strongly with histologically determined cancer volume than T2 and DCE parameters [17]. Nevertheless, reported ADC values in prostatic cancer and benign tissue overlap substantially, particularly in the central and transition zones [24,25].

4.2. ADC Variations in Prostate Tissue at the Microstructure Scale

Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance microimaging of formalin fixed prostate tissue has revealed distinctly different diffusion dynamics in the three major gland components. ADC is low in the epithelium, higher in the fibromuscular stroma, and highest in lumen space [26]. Diffusion anisotropy is high in the fibromuscular stroma, and low in the epithelium layer and lumen space [27]. In the stroma the preferential diffusion direction matches the orientation of the smooth muscle cells [27]. Changes in the relative partial volume of these gland components appears to be the most significant contributor to ADC differences detected at the spatial resolution typical of clinical prostate scans (see Section 4.3). Low ADC epithelium has also been found in breast [28] and esophagus [29] tissue; however, the biophysical basis of ADC differences between epithelium and stroma is yet to be elucidated.

4.3. ADC and ‘Cellularity’

Cancer-related changes in DWI signal contrast and ADC are conventionally attributed to tissue ‘cellularity’ variations. The commonly reported cellularity metrics are nuclear count per unit area in a histological image, and nuclear area per unit area. While there is substantial evidence for a correlation between these metrics and ADC in neural tissue, there is very limited biophysical evidence that in cancer tissue a higher cell density will, per se, result in ADC changes. Besides cell density, membrane permeability and multiple intra- and extracellular structural features will affect the measured ADC. In the prostate, cell type may be more important than cell density. In fixed whole prostates, both ADC and Gleason pattern changes correlate more strongly with relative partial volume of the gland components epithelium, stroma, and lumen than with cellularity metrics [30].

5. Improving on ADC—Phenomenological Models

5.1. DTI: A Simple Anisotropic Model

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) extends the isotropic, monoexponential ADC model to account for diffusion anisotropy. ADC is replaced by a 3 × 3 symmetric tensor D. The extra degrees of freedom allow the model to detect anisotropy when there is underlying microstructure with a high degree of structural order. D summarizes the principal diffusion directions (eigenvectors) and corresponding diffusivities (eigenvalues λ 1 λ 2 λ 3 ). One of the most commonly used metrics derived from the tensor is the fractional anisotropy (FA) which indicates the degree of any anisotropy:
F A = ( λ 1 λ 2 ) 2 + ( λ 1 λ 3 ) 2 + ( λ 2 λ 3 ) 2 2 ( λ 1 2 + λ 2 2 + λ 3 2 )
Clearly, there are many nonidentical tensors D that could have identical FA values, emphasizing that FA is a non-specific marker of microstructural order.
At the tissue microstructure scale regions of coherent myocyte orientation in prostate fibromuscular stroma give rise to distinct diffusion anisotropy [27,31]. However, in vivo DTI studies of the prostate have yielded inconsistent results for the value of FA in predicting the presence of cancer [32,33,34,35,36,37]. Some of this inconsistency likely results from method variations and the well-known sensitivity of FA to measurement noise [38,39]. Further, at typical clinical imaging spatial resolutions (voxel volume 4–16 mm3), incoherent smooth muscle orientation within individual voxels would be expected to reduce the measured FA. A study of whole prostates ex vivo demonstrated a consistent and continuous decrease in FA as voxel volume increased, and very large differences in average FA between prostates [40].
Such equivocal results highlight the weakness of the DTI model for describing prostatic tissue, and as a recent study suggests [41], anisotropy may be more informative and reliable as part of a multicompartment model (see Section 7.2).

5.2. Higher Order Isotropic Models

The non-monoexponential DWI signal attenuation with increasing b-factor has been characterized with a range of mathematical models of variable complexity (see Section 6 for methods of comparing models). The simplest of these assesses the kurtosis of the signal attenuation, or how it deviates from a monoexponential [42]:
S = S 0 e ( D K b K 6 D K 2 b 2 )
In this model the ADC is replaced by a kurtosis-adjusted diffusivity ( D K ). The kurtosis (K) has no biophysical interpretation, but has been reported to provide more accurate cancer detection (higher area under an ROC curve) than ADC [43,44].
For DWI measurements that include very high diffusion weightings a biexponential model is preferred:
S = S 1 e D 1 b + S 2 e D 2 b
This is basically a ‘two ADCs’ model and can be interpreted to represent two distinct pools of water, though the temptation to assign the pools to specific tissue compartments should be resisted [45]. The biexponential is the basis of the ‘IVIM’ (intravascular incoherent motion) model [46] that can be used for measurements that include intermediate and very low diffusion weightings and thus may be significantly affected by tissue perfusion. In this instance the very high ADC of one of the water components enables its unequivocal assignment to blood flow rather than thermal diffusion. The IVIM model has shown inconsistent results for prostate cancer assessment. While some studies found poor diagnostic value compared to ADC [47,48,49], others report significant differences between the IVIM parameters for benign and cancer tissue [50,51]. Perhaps surprisingly, there appears to be no consistent agreement between the characteristics of the perfusion attenuated signal and dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) model parameters. One study reported lower perfusion fractions in cancer tissue [49], contrary to DCE-MRI studies and expected tumour angiogenesis, while another found opposite correlations [52].
The stretched exponential model assumes that tissue microstructure heterogeneity results in the the presence of a large number of Gaussian components each with different diffusivities [53]:
S = S 0 e ( D s b ) α
where α is the ‘stretching factor’ and D s is a ‘stretch-adjusted’ diffusivity.
Phenomenological models permit only limited physical interpretation, however, by comparing the theoretical information content of different signal models applied to the same measurement data (see Section 6.2) it is possible to make general inferences about underlying tissue structure.

6. Model Selection and Performance Testing

Phenomenological models of prostate DWI have generally been compared either by assessment of their cancer prediction performance or by estimation of their relative theoretical information content.

6.1. Correlation of Model Parameters and Tissue Pathology

A major weakness of almost all of the studies that compare models on the basis of cancer prediction performance is that the common practice is to correlate individual parameters of multi-parameter models with pathology. In this instance only a fraction of the model’s information content is being tested and the implicit purpose of using a higher order model may be defeated, except in the fortuitous and unpredictable circumstance when a particular parameter contains most of the diagnostic information. Only very recently have a few authors begun to assess the predictive value of parameter combinations and thus incorporate all model information [54].

6.2. Model Ranking Based on Information Theory

As an alternative to pathology detection performance, especially in the absence of large sample sizes and reliable correlation of imaging and histopathology ‘truth’ data, competing DWI data models can be compared in terms of their theoretical information content. The implicit assumption of this approach is that a higher information content implies greater microstructure prediction accuracy from a specific set of measurement data (see Section 6.3).
A highly parameterized model will in general always fit a given data set more closely (‘better’) than a model with fewer parameters. But do the extra model parameters have any physical meaning in terms of the measured system? Applied to the problem of model selection from inevitably noisy measurement data, information theory aims to balance the inherent parameter bias of overly simplistic models against ‘overfitting’ and consequent high parameter variance of highly parameterized models [55]. The Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) [56], and similar Baysian Information Criterion [57], provide an estimate of the relative distance of competing models from an unknowable ‘truth’. In the specific case of water diffusion in biological tissue the truth is immensely complex and the best we can aim for is a diagnostically informative approximation.
Applied to prostate DWI, the information theory approach demonstrates that in whole organs examined ex vivo (eliminating perfusion effects) with a wide range of diffusion weightings the 3-parameter biexponential model has a significantly higher information content than 1-parameter ADC, and 2-parameter kurtosis and stretched exponential models [45]. This result enables the general inference that there exist two water diffusion environments with distinct ‘structure densities’ leading to two different apparent diffusion coefficients. The comparatively low information content of the ADC, kurtosis, and stretched exponential models indicates that there is not simply one heterogeneous structural environment leading to a continuum of diffusion coefficients. In vivo prostate DWI studies support the existence of two diffusion environments distinct from the vasculature [58,59]. Application of the stretched exponential model to the individual components of the biexponential model demonstrates the two distinct diffusion environments are internally heterogeneous [60], but further basic science studies are required to identify these environments histologically. These results, while providing some insight into the complexity of water diffusion dynamics in prostate tissue, highlight the current absence of a clear biophysical understanding of the mechanisms of a powerful clinical imaging technique.

6.3. The Importance of Imaging Method

Whatever approach is used for model selection it is important to note that the imaging protocol is critical. With a given set of measurement data the best model is conceptually the one that extracts most information from the inevitably noisy data, and practically the one that provides the most accurate (sensitive and specific) pathology prediction. If the imaging protocol is inappropriate then the measurement data will not contain information that predicts pathology. Improving the clinical performance of DWI thus depends on optimization of both the measurement technique and the signal analysis model. Because of the inherently low signal-to-noise ratio of MRI in general, and DWI in particular, there are significant technical, practical, and financial constraints on obtaining an information-rich measurement.
For prostate DWI, imaging method considerations appear in a plethora of research publications around the theme of an ‘optimum b-factor’ for cancer detection. Unfortunately, as mentioned in Section 3.1, the importance of diffusion time in defining the structure-scale sensitivity of the imaging method is generally not recognized and diffusion times are very rarely reported. Different MRI scanners are likely to generate the same b-factor according to the available maximum gradient strength (which may vary widely between scanners) and thus using very different diffusion times [21]. As yet, the diffusion time-dependence of ADC measurements in prostate tissue has not been investigated.

6.4. Model-Based Image Synthesis

Because of reports that acquisitions performed with higher b-factors have greater cancer detection accuracy there has been strong recent interest in methods that compute a high b-factor image using only low and intermediate b-factor scans [61]. This ‘computed high b-value DWI’ uses a diffusion model (most commonly ADC, but kurtosis and IVIM have been used) to produce high contrast diffusion-weighted images with lower noise than images actually acquired with the high b-factor. There are variable reports of diagnostic value [62,63], and again, possible effects of diffusion time differences have been neglected. Computation of a high b-factor image should be regarded as a noise reduction technique since the computed image contains no information that is not present in the actually acquired low and intermediate b-factor scans. ‘Apparent high b-value DWI’ would be more appropriate term for this model-based technique [64].

7. Compartment Models

7.1. Two-Compartment Models

Compartment models aim to make a direct assignment of the microstructural features that cause signal changes. Ideally the model components will relate closely to diagnostic tissue features. A common approach uses compartment models that describe the DWI signal as the sum of separate signals arising from separate (non-mixing) populations of water molecules in distinct structural environments. Most previous studies have quantified properties of neural tissue [65,66], but recent applications of structural models to the diffusion signals of non-neural tissue show promise.
The intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) model (see Section 5.2) separates the signals from vascular and non-vascular water, however, its description of diffusion in the cellular component of the tissue does not account for the known presence of two clearly distinct “slow” and “fast” diffusion environments. This deficiency of the IVIM model may be responsible for inconsistent estimates of the fast and slow diffusion parameters [49,52,67].

7.2. A Three-Compartment Model: VERDICT

The recent VERDICT (Vascular, Extracellular, and Restricted Diffusion for Cytometry in Tumours) framework addresses some of the limitations of the IVIM model by using two isotropic components to describe the non-vascular diffusion environment [68]. Significantly, VERDICT addresses the diffusion time dependence of the signal attenuation by modeling the intracellular space as an impermeable spherical pore. For in vivo data the inherently low signal-to-noise ratio necessitates model fitting based on fixed diffusion coefficients and the model provides estimates of f EES (extracellular/extravascular space volume fraction), f IC (intracellular (IC) volume fraction), f VASC (vascular volume fraction), and R (cell radius). f IC / R 3 provides a measure of cell density.
A preclinical application of VERDICT in a colorectal cancer model [68] provided estimates of cancer cell size (R), cell density ( f IC / R 3 ), and vascular volume ( f VASC ) in close agreement with histology. More importantly, these parameters distinguished tumour cell lines and detected the effects of chemotherapy, while the standard ADC and IVIM techniques failed. An in vivo pilot of prostate cancer showed qualitatively good discrimination of cancer and benign tissue [58], however, this study used long imaging protocols which are not feasible for routine clinical use. More recently an accelerated VERDICT protocol for prostate [69] was developed using an optimization technique [70] to identify a feasible measurement protocol that accommodates clinical and hardware constraints.
One of the current limitations of VERDICT is the neglect of diffusion anisotropy in the prostate. A possible reason for inconsistent results from DTI-based estimates of diffusion anisotropy (see Section 5.1), separate from the highly heterogeneous stromal fiber orientation, is the masking of sub-voxel diffusion anisotropy by the presence of a significant ‘background’ pool of water having isotropic diffusion dynamics. This possibility has been addressed in a study of whole prostates ex vivo that compared ten different compartment models [41]. This study found that under all measurement conditions tested the highest information content models were those that included both an isotropic restricted diffusion component and an unrestricted anisotropic component. Fractional anisotropy (FA) calculated from the anisotropic component of the two-component models was higher than FA calculated from the DTI model—indicating the presence of a masking effect. It remains to be determined whether this more sensitive anisotropy detection method has any diagnostic value.
The ex vivo prostate study [41] supported the generality and broad applicability of VERDICT in several ways:
  • Model selection results were largely independent of voxel size—indicating that the successful modeling of ‘true’ diffusion in the non-vascular space as one restricted and one unrestricted compartment is not strongly dependent on the amount of subvoxel structure heterogeneity.
  • Model selection results were largely independent of maximum b-factor.
  • The diffusivity parameters were not fixed during model fitting in the ex vivo study, but still returned average values similar to the fixed diffusivities used in fitting VERDICT to the relatively noisy in vivo data. This provides an independent validation of the fixed values used for the in vivo data fitting.

8. Future Directions

The role of DWI in prostate pathology assessment is in a very early stage of development and although demonstrably effective, the current standard ADC model could not be less sophisticated. More advanced signal analysis models show promise of improved accuracy but in many cases have not been appropriately tested and the DWI acquisition methods are inconsistent despite attempts to implement a consensus-based standard. Incomplete reporting of critical measurement parameters may be resulting in an underestimation of the diagnostic accuracy of DWI methods. Recent basic science investigations have improved our understanding of the way prostate tissue microstructure determines the nature of contrast in diffusion-weighted images, but significant issues remain. The priorities for prostate DWI method development should address:
  • Diffusion time. The diffusion time dependence of DWI measurements needs to be clarified and diffusion time reported in all published studies to enable controlled meta-analysis. The consensus methods should include a specification of recommended diffusion time. At present only the VERDICT method specifically accounts for and exploits the diffusion time dependence of the signal.
  • Membrane permeability. At present, the multi-compartment structural models and multi-component phenomenological models assume no exchange of water between the compartments/components during the DWI measurement. Studies of a range of cell types in suspension found that membrane permeability alterations produced significant effects on DWI model parameters [71,72]. Although technically challenging, incorporation of water exchange may be an important component of DWI model optimization for clinical applications.
  • T2 relaxation. Current multi-component models also neglect or implement strategies to minimize potential complications due to the possible presence of multiple water pools with different spin-spin (T2) relaxation rates, despite evidence of their existence in prostate tissue [73,74,75]. There are, as yet, no studies that investigate whether the two main water pools identified in diffusion analyses have a direct one-to-one correspondence with the apparently distinct T2 water pools.
  • Diagnostic accuracy. The complex diffusion dynamics of biological tissue means that appropriately developed multi-component models are likely to supersede the current ADC method used in prostate mpMRI. It is essential that assessment of the clinical performance of these models is based on testing of their total information content by using methods that correlate pathology and tissue structure features with the combined model parameters.

Acknowledgments

Roger Bourne received research funding from Australian National Health and Medical Research Council grant 1026467. Eleftheria Panagiotaki received research funding from CRUK/EPSRC Comprehensive Cancer Imaging Centre grant C1519/A16463 and EPSRC grant EP/N021967/1.

Author Contributions

Roger Bourne and Eleftheria Panagiotaki contributed equally to the work presented in this review.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are used in this manuscript:
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging
DWI
Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging
ADC
Apparent diffusion coefficient
DTI
Diffusion tensor imaging
FA
Fractional anisotropy
VERDICT
Vascular, Extracellular, and Restricted Diffusion for Cytometry in Tumours

References

  1. Siegel, R.; Naishadham, D.; Jemal, A. Cancer statistics, 2013. CA Cancer J. Clin. 2013, 63, 11–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  2. Nelson, B. Tumour volume is an independent predictor of prostate-specific antigen recurrence in patients undergoing radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer. BJU Int. 2006, 97, 1169–1172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Hong, M. Prostate tumour volume is an independent predictor of early biochemical recurrence in a high risk radical prostatectomy subgroup. Pathology 2011, 43, 138–142. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Guzzo, T.J.; Vira, M.; Hwang, W.T.; D’Amico, A.; Tomaszewski, J.; Whittington, R.; Wein, A.J.; Vanarsdalen, K.; Malkowicz, S.B. Impact of multiple biopsy cores on predicting final tumor volume in prostate cancer detected by a single microscopic focus of cancer on biopsy. Urology 2005, 66, 361–365. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  5. Isariyawongse, B.K.; Sun, L.; Bañez, L.L.; Robertson, C.; Polascik, T.J.; Maloney, K.; Donatucci, C.; Albala, D.; Mouraviev, V.; Madden, J.F.; et al. Significant discrepancies between diagnostic and pathologic Gleason sums in prostate cancer: The predictive role of age and prostate-specific antigen. Urology 2008, 72, 882–886. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  6. Huo, A.S.; Hossack, T.; Symons, J.L.; PeBenito, R.; Delprado, W.J.; Brenner, P.; Stricker, P.D. Accuracy of primary systematic template guided transperineal biopsy of the prostate for locating prostate cancer: A comparison with radical prostatectomy specimens. J. Urol. 2012, 187, 2044–2050. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  7. Stackhouse, D.A.; Sun, L.; Schroeck, F.R.; Jayachandran, J.; Caire, A.A.; Acholo, C.O.; Robertson, C.N.; Albala, D.M.; Polascik, T.J.; Donatucci, C.F.; et al. Factors predicting prostatic biopsy Gleason sum under grading. J. Urol. 2009, 182, 118–124. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  8. Moyer, V.A. Screening for prostate cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann. Intern. Med. 2012, 157, 120–134. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  9. Thompson, I.M.; Pauler, D.K.; Goodman, P.J.; Tangen, C.M.; Lucia, M.S.; Parnes, H.L.; Minasian, L.M.; Ford, L.G.; Lippman, S.M.; Crawford, E.D.; et al. Prevalence of prostate cancer among men with a prostate-specific antigen level less than or equal to 4.0 ng per milliliter. N. Engl. J. Med. 2004, 350, 2239–2246. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  10. Keall, P.; Colvill, E.; O’Brien, R.; Ng, J.; Poulsen, P.; Eade, T.; Kneebone, A.; Booth, J. The first clinical implementation of electromagnetic transponder-guided MLC tracking. Med. Phys. 2014, 41, 020702. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  11. Rosenkrantz, A.B.; Taneja, S.S. Radiologist, Be Aware: Ten Pitfalls That Confound the Interpretation of Multiparametric Prostate MRI. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2014, 202, 109–120. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  12. Turkbey, B.; Mani, H.; Aras, O.; Ho, J.; Hoang, A.; Rastinehad, A.R.; Agarwal, H.; Shah, V.; Bernardo, M.; Pang, Y.; et al. Prostate cancer: Can multiparametric MR imaging help identify patients who are candidates for active surveillance? Radiology 2013, 268, 144–152. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  13. Thompson, J.E.; Moses, D.; Shnier, R.; Brenner, P.; Delprado, W.; Ponsky, L.; Pulbrook, M.; Böhm, M.; Haynes, A.M.; Hayen, A.; et al. Multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging guided diagnostic biopsy detects significant prostate cancer and could reduce unnecessary biopsies and over detection: A prospective study. J. Urol. 2014, 192, 67–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  14. American College of Radiology PI-RADS. Prostate Imaging—Reporting and Data System 2015 Version 2; Technical Report; American College of Radiology: Reston, VA, USA, 2015. [Google Scholar]
  15. Kirkham, A.P.; Haslam, P.; Keanie, J.Y.; McCafferty, I.; Padhani, A.R.; Punwani, S.; Richenberg, J.; Rottenberg, G.; Sohaib, A.; Thompson, P.; et al. Prostate MRI: Who, when, and how? Report from a UK consensus meeting. Clin. Radiol. 2013, 68, 1016–1023. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  16. Dickinson, L.; Ahmed, H.U.; Allen, C.; Barentsz, J.O.; Carey, B.; Futterer, J.J.; Heijmink, S.W.; Hoskin, P.J.; Kirkham, A.; Padhani, A.R.; et al. Magnetic resonance imaging for the detection, localisation, and characterisation of prostate cancer: Recommendations from a european consensus meeting. Eur. Urol. 2011, 59, 477–494. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  17. Isebaert, S.; van den Bergh, L.; Haustermans, K.; Joniau, S.; Lerut, E.; de Wever, L.; de Keyzer, F.; Budiharto, T.; Slagmolen, P.; van Poppel, H.; et al. Multiparametric MRI for prostate cancer localization in correlation to whole-mount histopathology. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2012, 37, 1392–1401. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  18. Selnaes, K.; Heerschap, A.; Jensen, L.R.; Tessem, M.B.; Jarosch-Von Schweder, G.; Goa, P.E.; Viset, T.; Angelsen, A.; Gribbestad, I.S. Peripheral zone prostate cancer localization by multiparametric magnetic resonance at 3 T: Unbiased cancer identification by matching to histopathology. Investig. Radiol. 2012, 47, 624–633. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  19. Metzger, G.J.; Kalavagunta, C.; Spilseth, B.; Bolan, P.J.; Li, X.; Hutter, D.; Nam, J.W.; Johnson, A.D.; Henriksen, J.C.; Moench, L. Detection of prostate cancer: Multiparametric MR imaging models developed by using registered correlative histopathologic results. Radiology 2016, 279. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  20. Jones, D.K. Diffusion MRI; Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK, 2010. [Google Scholar]
  21. Bourne, R. The trouble with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) papers (Invited editorial). J. Med. Radiat. Sci. 2015, 62, 89–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  22. Hambrock, T.; Somford, D.M.; Huisman, H.J.; van Oort, I.M.; Witjes, J.A.; Hulsbergen-van de Kaa, C.A.; Scheenen, T.; Barentsz, J.O. Relationship between apparent diffusion coefficients at 3.0-T MR imaging and Gleason grade in peripheral zone prostate cancer. Radiology 2011, 259, 453–461. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  23. Oto, A.; Yang, C.; Kayhan, A.; Tretiakova, M.; Antic, T.; Schmid-Tannwald, C.; Eggener, S.; Karczmar, G.S.; Stadler, W.M. Diffusion-weighted and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI of prostate cancer: Correlation of quantitative MR parameters with Gleason score and tumor angiogenesis. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2011, 197, 1382–1390. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  24. Gibbs, P.; Liney, G.P.; Pickles, M.D.; Zelhof, B.; Rodrigues, G.; Turnbull, L.W. Correlation of ADC and T2 measurements with cell density in prostate cancer at 3.0 tesla. Investig. Radiol. 2009, 44, 572–576. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  25. Kim, C.K.; Park, B.K.; Han, J.J.; Kang, T.W.; Lee, H.M. Diffusion-weighted imaging of the prostate at 3 T for differentiation of malignant and benign tissue in transition and peripheral zones: Preliminary results. J. Comput. Assist. Tomogr. 2007, 31, 449–454. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  26. Bourne, R.M.; Kurniawan, N.; Cowin, G.; Stait-Gardner, T.; Sved, P.; Watson, G.; Price, W.S. Microscopic diffusivity compartmentation in formalin-fixed prostate tissue. Magn. Reson. Med. 2012, 68, 614–620. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  27. Bourne, R.; Kurniawan, N.; Cowin, G.; Sved, P.; Watson, G. Microscopic diffusion anisotropy in formalin fixed prostate tissue: Preliminary findings. Magn. Reson. Med. 2012, 68, 1943–1948. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  28. Norddin, N.; Power, C.; Watson, G.; Cowin, G.; Kurniawan, N.; Gluch, L.; Bourne, R. Microscopic diffusion properties of fixed breast tissue: Preliminary findings. Magn. Reson. Med. 2015, 74, 1733–1739. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  29. Yamada, I.; Hikishima, K.; Miyasaka, N.; Kawano, T.; Tokairin, Y.; Ito, E.; Kobayashi, D.; Eishi, Y.; Okano, H. Esophageal carcinoma: Ex vivo evaluation with diffusion-tensor MR imaging and tractography at 7 T. Radiology 2014, 272, 164–173. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  30. Chatterjee, A.; McEntee, M.; Watson, G.; Myint, E.; Bourne, R. Changes in epithelium, stroma, and lumen space correlate more strongly with prostate cancer Gleason grade than cellularity metrics. Radiology 2015, 277, 751–762. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  31. Bourne, R.; Kurniawan, N.; Cowin, G.; Sved, P.; Watson, G. 16 T diffusion microimaging of fixed prostate tissue. Preliminary findings. Magn. Reson. Med. 2011, 66, 244–247. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  32. Sinha, S.; Sinha, U. In vivo diffusion tensor imaging of the human prostate. Magn. Reson. Med. 2004, 52, 530–537. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  33. Manenti, G.; Carlani, M.; Mancino, S.; Colangelo, V.; Di Roma, M.; Squillaci, E.; Simonetti, G. Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging of prostate cancer. Investig. Radiol. 2007, 42, 412–419. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  34. Gibbs, P.; Pickles, M.D.; Turnbull, L.W. Diffusion imaging of the prostate at 3.0 tesla. Investig. Radiol. 2006, 41, 185–188. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Haker, S.; Barnes, A.; Maier, S.; Tempany, C.; Mulkern, R. Diffusion tensor imaging for prostate cancer detection: Preliminary results from a biopsy-based assessment. In Proceedings of the 13th Annual Meeting of ISMRM, Miami Beach, FL, USA, 7–13 May 2005; p. 2126.
  36. Gurses, B.; Kabakci, N.; Kovanlikaya, A.; Firat, Z.; Bayram, A.; Ulug, A.M.; Kovanlikaya, I. Diffusion tensor imaging of the normal prostate at 3 Tesla. Eur. Radiol. 2008, 18, 716–721. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  37. Quentin, M.; Blondin, D.; Klasen, J.; Lanzman, R.S.; Miese, F.R.; Arsov, C.; Albers, P.; Antoch, G.; Wittsack, H.J. Comparison of different mathematical models of diffusion-weighted prostate MR imaging. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2012, 30, 1468–1474. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  38. Uribe, C.F.; Jones, E.C.; Chang, S.D.; Goldenberg, S.L.; Reinsberg, S.A.; Kozlowski, P. In vivo 3 T and ex vivo 7 T diffusion tensor imaging of prostate cancer: Correlation with histology. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2015, 33, 577–583. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  39. Reinsberg, S.; Brewster, J.; Payne, G.; Leach, M.; Desouza, N. Anisotropic diffusion in prostate cancer: Fact or artefact. In Proceedings of the 13th Annual Meeting of ISMRM, Miami Beach, FL, USA, 7–13 May 2005; p. 269.
  40. Bourne, R.M.; Bongers, A.; Chatterjee, A.; Sved, P.; Watson, G. Diffusion anisotropy in fresh and fixed prostate tissue ex vivo. Magn. Resona. Med. 2016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  41. Liang, S.; Panagiotaki, E.; Bongers, A.; Shi, P.; Sved, P.; Watson, G.; Bourne, R. Information based ranking of ten compartment models of diffusion weighted signal attenuation in fixed prostate tissue. NMR Biomed. 2016, 29, 660–671. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  42. Jensen, J.H.; Helpern, J.A.; Ramani, A.; Lu, H.; Kaczynski, K. Diffusional kurtosis imaging: The quantification of non-gaussian water diffusion by means of magnetic resonance imaging. Magn. Reson. Med. 2005, 53, 1432–1440. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  43. Rosenkrantz, A.B.; Prabhu, V.; Sigmund, E.E.; Babb, J.S.; Deng, F.M.; Taneja, S.S. Utility of diffusional kurtosis imaging as a marker of adverse pathologic outcomes among prostate cancer active surveillance candidates undergoing radical prostatectomy. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2013, 201, 840–846. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  44. Rosenkrantz, A.B.; Sigmund, E.E.; Johnson, G.; Babb, J.S.; Mussi, T.C.; Melamed, J.; Taneja, S.S.; Lee, V.S.; Jensen, J.H. Prostate cancer: Feasibility and preliminary experience of a diffusional kurtosis model for detection and assessment of aggressiveness of peripheral zone cancer. Radiology 2012, 264, 126–135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  45. Bourne, R.M.; Panagiotaki, E.; Bongers, A.; Sved, P.; Watson, G.; Alexander, D.C. Information theoretic ranking of four models of diffusion attenuation in fresh and fixed prostate tissue ex vivo. Magn. Reson. Med. 2014, 72, 1418–1426. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  46. Le Bihan, D.; Breton, E.; Lallemand, D.; Aubin, M.; Vignaud, J.; Laval-Jeantet, M. Separation of diffusion and perfusion in intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging. Radiology 1988, 168, W497–W505. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  47. Dopfert, J.; Lemke, A.; Weidner, A.; Schad, L.R. Investigation of prostate cancer using diffusion-weighted intravoxel incoherent motion imaging. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2011, 29, 1053–1058. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  48. Kuru, T.H.; Roethke, M.C.; Stieltjes, B.; Maier-Hein, K.; Schlemmer, H.P.; Hadaschik, B.A.; Fenchel, M. Intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) diffusion imaging in prostate cancer-what does it add? J. Comput. Assist. Tomogr. 2014, 38, 558–564. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  49. Riches, S.F.; Hawtin, K.; Charles-Edwards, E.M.; de Souza, N.M. Diffusion-weighted imaging of the prostate and rectal wall: Comparison of biexponential and monoexponential modelled diffusion and associated perfusion coefficients. NMR Biomed. 2009, 22, 318–325. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  50. Valerio, M.; Zini, C.; Fierro, D.; Giura, F.; Colarieti, A.; Giuliani, A.; Laghi, A.; Catalano, C.; Panebianco, V. 3 T multiparametric MRI of the prostate: Does intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion imaging have a role in the detection and stratification of prostate cancer in the peripheral zone? Eur. J. Radiol. 2016, 85, 790–794. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  51. Shinmoto, H.; Tamura, C.; Soga, S.; Shiomi, E.; Yoshihara, N.; Kaji, T.; Mulkern, R.V. An intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion-weighted imaging study of prostate cancer. Am. J. Roentgenol. 2012, 199, W496–W500. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  52. Pang, Y.; Turkbey, B.; Bernardo, M.; Kruecker, J.; Kadoury, S.; Merino, M.J.; Wood, B.J.; Pinto, P.A.; Choyke, P.L. Intravoxel incoherent motion MR imaging for prostate cancer: An evaluation of perfusion fraction and diffusion coefficient derived from different b-value combinations. Magn. Reson. Med. 2013, 69, 553–562. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  53. Kopf, M.; Corinth, C.; Haferkamp, O.; Nonnenmacher, T. Anomalous diffusion of water in biological tissues. Biophys. J. 1996, 70, 2950–2958. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  54. Merisaari, H.; Movahedi, P.; Perez, I.M.; Toivonen, J.; Pesola, M.; Taimen, P.; Boström, P.J.; Pahikkala, T.; Kiviniemi, A.; Aronen, H.J.; et al. Fitting methods for intravoxel incoherent motion imaging of prostate cancer on region of interest level: Repeatability and gleason score prediction. Magn. Reson. Med. 2016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  55. Burnham, K.; Anderson, D. Model Selection and Inference: A Practical Information Theoretical Approach; Springer-Verlag: New York, NY, USA, 1998. [Google Scholar]
  56. Akaike, H. Information theory and an extension of the maximum likelihood principle. In Selected Papers of Hirotugu Akaike; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 1998; pp. 199–213. [Google Scholar]
  57. Schwarz, G. Estimating the dimension of a model. Ann. Stat. 1978, 6, 461–464. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Panagiotaki, E.; Chan, R.; Dikaios, H.; Ahmed, H.; O’Callaghan, J.; Freeman, A.; Atkinson, D.; Punwani, S.; Hawkes, D.; Alexander, D. Microstructural characterization of normal and malignant human prostate tissue with vascular, extracellular, and restricted diffusion for cytometry in tumours magnetic resonance imaging. Investig. Radiol. 2015, 50, 218–227. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  59. Shinmoto, H.; Oshio, K.; Tanimoto, A.; Higuchi, N.; Okuda, S.; Kuribayashi, S.; Mulkern, R.V. Biexponential apparent diffusion coefficients in prostate cancer. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2009, 27, 355–359. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  60. Hall, M.; Bongers, A.; Sved, P.; Watson, G.; Bourne, R. Assessment of non-Gaussian diffusion with singly and doubly stretched biexponential models of DWI signal attenuation in prostate tissue. NMR Biomed. 2015, 28, 486–495. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  61. Maas, M.C.; Fütterer, J.J.; Scheenen, T.W. Quantitative evaluation of computed high B value diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the prostate. Investig. Radiol. 2013, 48, 779–786. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  62. Grant, K.B.; Agarwal, H.K.; Shih, J.H.; Bernardo, M.; Pang, Y.; Daar, D.; Merino, M.J.; Wood, B.J.; Pinto, P.A.; Choyke, P.L.; et al. Comparison of calculated and acquired high b value diffusion-weighted imaging in prostate cancer. Abdom. Imaging 2015, 40, 578–586. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  63. Feuerlein, S.; Davenport, M.; Krishnaraj, A.; Merkle, E.; Gupta, R.T. Computed high b-value diffusion-weighted imaging improves lesion contrast and conspicuity in prostate cancer. Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis. 2015, 18, 155–160. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  64. Shafiee, M.J.; Haider, S.A.; Wong, A.; Lui, D.; Cameron, A.; Modhafar, A.; Fieguth, P.; Haider, M.A. Apparent ultra-high-value diffusion-weighted image reconstruction via hidden conditional random fields. IEEE Trans. Med. Imaging 2015, 34, 1111–1124. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  65. Alexander, D.C.; Hubbard, P.L.; Hall, M.G.; Moore, E.A.; Ptito, M.; Parker, G.J.M.; Dyrby, T.B. Orientationally invariant indices of axon diameter and density from diffusion MRI. Neuroimage 2010, 52, 1374–1389. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  66. Zhang, H.; Schneider, T.; Wheeler-Kingshott, C.A.; Alexander, D.C. NODDI: Practical in vivo neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging of the human brain. Neuroimage 2012, 61, 1000–1016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  67. Xu, J.; Does, M.D.; Gore, J.C. Sensitivity of MR diffusion measurements to variations in intracellular structure: Effects of nuclear size. Magn. Reson. Med. 2009, 61, 828–833. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  68. Panagiotaki, E.; Walker-Samuel, S.; Siow, B.; Johnson, P.; Rajkumarc, V.; Pedley, R.; Lythgoe, M.F.; Alexander, D. Non-invasive quantification of solid tumor microstructure using VERDICT MRI. Cancer Res. 2014, 74, 1902–1912. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  69. Panagiotaki, E.; Andrada, I.; Johnston, E.; Chan, R.; Stevens, N.; Atkinson, D.; Punwani, S.; Hawkes, D.; Alexander, D. Optimised VERDICT MRI protocol for prostate cancer characterisation. In Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Milan, Italy, 10–16 May 2014; p. 2872.
  70. Alexander, D.C. A general framework for experiment design in diffusion MRI and its application in measuring direct tissue-microstructure features. Magn. Reson. Med. 2008, 60, 439–448. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  71. Li, H.; Jiang, X.; Xie, J.; McIntyre, J.O.; Gore, J.C.; Xu, J. Time-dependent influence of cell membrane permeability on mr diffusion measurements. Magn. Reson. Med. 2016, 75, 1927–1934. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  72. Thelwall, P.E.; Grant, S.C.; Stanisz, G.J.; Blackband, S.J. Human erythrocyte ghosts: Exploring the origins of multiexponential water diffusion in a model biological tissue with magnetic resonance. Magn. Reson. Med. 2002, 48, 649–657. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  73. Storas, T.; Bongers, A.; Power, C.; Bourne, R. Effect of formalin fixation on biexponential modeling of T1 and T2 Decay in prostate tissue. In Proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, 20–26 April 2013; p. 1792.
  74. Storas, T.H.; Gjesdal, K.I.; Gadmar, O.B.; Geitung, J.T.; Klow, N.E. Prostate magnetic resonance imaging: Multiexponential T2 decay in prostate tissue. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2008, 28, 1166–1172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  75. Storas, T.H.; Gjesdal, K.I.; Gadmar, O.B.; Geitung, J.T.; Klow, N.E. Three-dimensional balanced steady state free precession imaging of the prostate: Flip angle dependency of the signal based on a two component T2-decay model. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2010, 31, 1124–1131. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Bourne, R.; Panagiotaki, E. Limitations and Prospects for Diffusion-Weighted MRI of the Prostate. Diagnostics 2016, 6, 21. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics6020021

AMA Style

Bourne R, Panagiotaki E. Limitations and Prospects for Diffusion-Weighted MRI of the Prostate. Diagnostics. 2016; 6(2):21. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics6020021

Chicago/Turabian Style

Bourne, Roger, and Eleftheria Panagiotaki. 2016. "Limitations and Prospects for Diffusion-Weighted MRI of the Prostate" Diagnostics 6, no. 2: 21. https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics6020021

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop