Comparison of baseline correction algorithms for in vivo 1 H-MRS.
Diego PasmiñoJohannes SlotboomBrigitte SchweisthalPamela GuevaraWaldo ValenzuelaEsteban J PinoPublished in: NMR in biomedicine (2024)
Proton MRS is used clinically to collect localized, quantitative metabolic data from living tissues. However, the presence of baselines in the spectra complicates accurate MRS data quantification. The occurrence of baselines is not specific to short-echo-time MRS data. In short-echo-time MRS, the baseline consists typically of a dominating macromolecular (MM) part, and can, depending on B 0 shimming, poor voxel placement, and/or localization sequences, also contain broad water and lipid resonance components, indicated by broad components (BCs). In long-echo-time MRS, the MM part is usually much smaller, but BCs may still be present. The sum of MM and BCs is denoted by the baseline. Many algorithms have been proposed over the years to tackle these artefacts. A first approach is to identify the baseline itself in a preprocessing step, and a second approach is to model the baseline in the quantification of the MRS data themselves. This paper gives an overview of baseline handling algorithms and also proposes a new algorithm for baseline correction. A subset of suitable baseline removal algorithms were tested on in vivo MRSI data (semi-LASER at T E = 40 ms) and compared with the new algorithm. The baselines in all datasets were removed using the different methods and subsequently fitted using spectrIm-QMRS with a TDFDFit fitting model that contained only a metabolite basis set and lacked a baseline model. The same spectra were also fitted using a spectrIm-QMRS model that explicitly models the metabolites and the baseline of the spectrum. The quantification results of the latter quantification were regarded as ground truth. The fit quality number (FQN) was used to assess baseline removal effectiveness, and correlations between metabolite peak areas and ground truth models were also examined. The results show a competitive performance of our new proposed algorithm, underscoring its automatic approach and efficiency. Nevertheless, none of the tested baseline correction methods achieved FQNs as good as the ground truth model. All separately applied baseline correction methods introduce a bias in the observed metabolite peak areas. We conclude that all baseline correction methods tested, when applied as a separate preprocessing step, yield poorer FQNs and biased quantification results. While they may enhance visual display, they are not advisable for use before spectral fitting.