Mitral regurgitation quantification by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) remains reproducible between software solutions.
Ciaran Grafton-ClarkeGeorge D ThorntonBenjamin FidockGareth ArcherRod HoseRob J van der GeestLiang ZhongAndrew J SwiftJames M WildEstefania De GarateChiara Bucciarelli-DucciSven PleinThomas A TreibelMarcus FlatherVassilios S VassiliouPublished in: Wellcome open research (2023)
Background: The reproducibility of mitral regurgitation (MR) quantification by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging using different software solutions remains unclear. This research aimed to investigate the reproducibility of MR quantification between two software solutions: MASS (version 2019 EXP, LUMC, Netherlands) and CAAS (version 5.2, Pie Medical Imaging). Methods: CMR data of 35 patients with MR (12 primary MR, 13 mitral valve repair/replacement, and ten secondary MR) was used. Four methods of MR volume quantification were studied, including two 4D-flow CMR methods (MR MVAV and MR Jet ) and two non-4D-flow techniques (MR Standard and MR LVRV ). We conducted within-software and inter-software correlation and agreement analyses. Results: All methods demonstrated significant correlation between the two software solutions: MR Standard (r=0.92, p<0.001), MR LVRV (r=0.95, p<0.001), MR Jet (r=0.86, p<0.001), and MR MVAV (r=0.91, p<0.001). Between CAAS and MASS, MR Jet and MR MVAV , compared to each of the four methods, were the only methods not to be associated with significant bias. Conclusions: We conclude that 4D-flow CMR methods demonstrate equivalent reproducibility to non-4D-flow methods but greater levels of agreement between software solutions.