Purpose: To extend the variably-accelerated sensitivity encoding (vSENSE) method from 2D to 3D for fast chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) imaging, and prospectively implement it for clinical MRI.
Methods: The CEST scans were acquired from 7 normal volunteers and 15 brain tumor patients using a 3T clinical scanner. The 2D and 3D "artifact suppression" (AS) vSENSE algorithms were applied to generate sensitivity maps from a first scan acquired with conventional SENSE-accelerated 2D and 3D CEST data. The AS sensitivity maps were then applied to reconstruct the other CEST frames at higher acceleration factors. Both retrospective and prospective acceleration in phase-encoding and slice-encoding dimensions were implemented.
Results: Applying the 2D AS vSENSE algorithm to a 2-fold undersampled 3.5-ppm CEST frame halved the scan time of conventional SENSE, while generating essentially identical reconstruction errors (p ≈ 1.0). The 3D AS vSENSE algorithm permitted prospective acceleration by up to 8-fold, in total, from phase-encoding and slice-encoding directions for individual source CEST images, and an overall speed-up in scan time of 5-fold. The resulting vSENSE-accelerated amide proton transfer-weighted images agreed with conventional 2-fold-accelerated SENSE CEST results in brain tumor patients and healthy volunteers. Importantly, the vSENSE method eliminated unfolding artifacts in the slice-encoding direction that compromised conventional SENSE CEST scans.
Conclusion: The vSENSE method can be extended to 3D CEST imaging to provide higher acceleration factors than conventional SENSE without compromising accuracy.
Keywords: amide proton transfer (APT); artifact suppression (AS); chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST); fast imaging; variably accelerated sensitivity encoding (vSENSE).
© 2019 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.