Thin-Slice Prostate MRI Enabled by Deep Learning Image Reconstruction

Cancers (Basel). 2023 Jan 18;15(3):578. doi: 10.3390/cancers15030578.

Abstract

Objectives: Thin-slice prostate MRI might be beneficial for prostate cancer diagnostics. However, prolongation of acquisition time is a major drawback of thin-slice imaging. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of a thin-slice deep learning accelerated T2-weighted (w) TSE imaging sequence (T2DLR) of the prostate as compared to conventional T2w TSE imaging (T2S).

Materials and methods: Thirty patients were included in this prospective study at one university center after obtaining written informed consent. T2S (3 mm slice thickness) was acquired first in three orthogonal planes followed by thin-slice T2DLR (2 mm slice thickness) in axial plane. Acquisition time of axial conventional T2S was 4:12 min compared to 4:37 min for T2DLR. Imaging datasets were evaluated by two radiologists using a Likert-scale ranging from 1-4, with 4 being the best regarding the following parameters: sharpness, lesion detectability, artifacts, overall image quality, and diagnostic confidence. Furthermore, preference of T2S versus T2DLR was evaluated.

Results: The mean patient age was 68 ± 8 years. Sharpness of images and lesion detectability were rated better in T2DLR with a median of 4 versus a median of 3 in T2S (p < 0.001 for both readers). Image noise was evaluated to be significantly worse in T2DLR as compared to T2S (p < 0.001 and p = 0.021, respectively). Overall image quality was also evaluated to be superior in T2DLR versus T2S with a median of 4 versus 3 (p < 0.001 for both readers). Both readers chose T2DLR in 29 cases as their preference.

Conclusions: Thin-slice T2DLR of the prostate provides a significant improvement of image quality without significant prolongation of acquisition time.

Keywords: MRI; deep learning; image reconstruction; prostate; thin-slice.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding. We acknowledge support by Open Access Publishing Fund of University of Tübingen.