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Use of Dixon in magnetic resonance breast contrast-enhanced T1 weighted high-resolution imaging for mastectomy patients at 3T: A prospective study in single center.

BACKGROUND: For patients with complete breast resection, conventional contrast-enhanced T1-weighted imaging (CE-T1WI) with frequency-selective spectral attenuated inversion recovery (SPAIR) provides limited fat suppression on the postoperative side due to the uneven skin surface, inhomogeneous tissue environment, and frequency-selective feature of the SPAIR scheme, leading to difficulties in precise diagnosis. This study aimed to investigate the image quality and performance of the Dixon method compared with SPAIR in breast high-resolution CE-T1WI for mastectomy patients.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty female patients who had not performed any breast surgeries were randomly selected retrospectively as the control group. Postmastectomy female patients were enrolled to undergone high-resolution CE-T1WI with SPAIR and Dixon breast scans. Subjective scores were rated using a 5-point scale. Objective parameters, including contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), edge sharpness, and signal uniformity were measured and calculated. The Wilcoxon rank-sum test and Kappa statistic were used.

RESULTS: A total of 114 consecutive postmastectomy patients were included. Subjective scores of T1WI-SPAIR in the control group were all significantly better than those with SPAIR on the postoperative side of mastectomy patients (P < 0.01). Dixon outperformed SPAIR with significantly better subjective scores in regards to uniformity and degree of fat-suppression, anatomical structures depiction, lesion conspicuity, and axillary visibility (p < 0.05) in both post- and non-operative sides and bilateral axillary areas through the paired comparison. The objective parameters of Dixon were significantly better than those of SPAIR.

CONCLUSION: The Dixon method provided better image uniformity and higher fat suppression efficiency, and showed significant advantages in delineating the anatomical structures, with better axillary and lesion visibilities, especially on the completely removed breast side.

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