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Clinical Impact of Cardiac MRI T1 and T2 Parametric Mapping in Patients with Suspected Cardiomyopathy.

William WarnicaAmna Al-ArnawootAleksandra StanimirovicPaaladinesh ThavendiranathanRachel M WaldMini PakkalGauri Rani KarurBernd J WinterspergerValeria RacKate Hanneman
Published in: Radiology (2022)
Background There are limited data on the incremental value of parametric mapping compared with core cardiac MRI protocols for suspected cardiomyopathy in routine clinical practice. Purpose To evaluate the impact of cardiac MRI T1 and T2 mapping in routine clinical practice with respect to diagnostic accuracy, reader diagnostic confidence, and downstream cardiac imaging utilization. Materials and Methods In this retrospective single-center study, consecutive clinical cardiac MRI scans obtained with and without T1 and T2 mapping for evaluation of suspected cardiomyopathy between January 2017 and October 2019 were evaluated. Diagnostic accuracy and reader diagnostic confidence were evaluated in a random subset. Downstream cardiac imaging utilization was analyzed in patients with a minimum of 1 year of clinical follow-up ending before January 2020. Results A total of 1876 patients (mean age, 51 years ± 17 [SD]; 1113 men) were evaluated. Of these, 751 (40%) underwent cardiac MRI with the core protocol and 1125 (60%) with the core protocol plus T1 and T2 mapping. In the mapping group, T1 and T2 were high in 280 (25%) and 47 patients (4%), respectively. In the subset evaluated for diagnostic utility ( n = 450), the addition of T1 and T2 maps to the core protocol resulted in an improvement in reader diagnostic confidence in 174 patients (39%). Diagnostic sensitivity was higher with the core protocol plus mapping compared with the core protocol alone for myocarditis (89% [31 of 35 patients] vs 69% [24 of 35]; P = .008), Fabry disease (93% [13 of 14 patients] vs 50% [seven of 14]; P = .01), and amyloidosis (100% [16 of 16 patients] vs 63% [10 of 16]; P = .01). In the subset evaluated for downstream imaging utilization ( n = 903), 47% of patients with mapping had at least one subsequent cardiac imaging test compared with 55% of patients without mapping ( P = .01). Conclusion In patients with suspected cardiomyopathy, cardiac MRI with T1 and T2 mapping had high diagnostic utility and was associated with lower downstream cardiac imaging utilization. © RSNA, 2022 Online supplemental material is available for this article . See also the editorial by Jerosch-Herold and Coelho-Filho in this issue.
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