A hybrid PCA acceleration method for rapid real-time 2D MRI.
Mark WrightGawon HanJihyun YunEugene YipZsolt GabosNawaid UsmaniB Gino FalloneKeith WachowiczPublished in: Physics in medicine and biology (2024)
To develop a 2D MR acceleration method utilizing Principal Component Analysis (PCA) in a hybrid fashion for rapid real-time applications. 
Approach: Retrospective testing was performed on 10 lung, 10 liver and 10 prostate 3T MRI data sets for image quality and target contourability. Sampling of k-space is performed by acquiring central (low-frequency) data in every frame while the high-frequency data is incoherently undersampled such that all of k-space is acquired in a pre-determined number of frames. Firstly, Principal Components (PCs) representative of intra-frame correlations between central and outer k-space data are used to estimate unsampled data in the frame of interest. Then to add further stability, PCs representative of time-domain fluctuations within a reconstruction window of the most recent frames are fit to outer k-space data (including above estimations) to obtain final estimates in the frame of interest. Accelerated reconstructions between 3x and 8x were tested for image quality and contourability along with the optimal number of PCs for fitting. 
Main Results: It was found that at higher acceleration rates, image quality did not deteriorate significantly. Similarly, it was found that the images were of sufficient quality to contour a target using auto-contouring software at all tested acceleration rates and sites. SSIM values were found to be ≥ 0.91 at all accelerations tested. Similarly dice coefficients at the different sites were found to be ≥ 0.89 even at 8x accelerations which is on par with or better than intra-observer variation.
Significance: This method appears to produce improved image quality and contourability compared to previous PCA methods while also allowing a greater number of PCs to be used in reconstruction. The method can be run using a simple single-channel coil and does not require significant computing power to meet real-time interventional standards (reconstruction times ~50 ms/frame on Intel i5 CPU). 
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