Natalie Korn1,
John Kurhanewicz1, 2, Suchandrima Banerjee3,
Emine U. Saritas, Susan Noworolski1, 2
1Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, San
Francisco, CA, United States; 2Graduate Group in Bioengineering,
University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States; 3GE
Healthcare, San Francisco, CA, United States
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) increases both sensitivity and specificity in detecting prostate cancer in multiparametric MR studies. However, susceptibility artifact at interfaces between the prostate and air, blood, or fecal matter confounds DWI images. A novel, reduced field-of-view pulse sequence to reduce distortion in DWI was evaluated in 27 prostate cancer patients. Visually-assessed distortion was reduced in 75% of patients (p<0.0003) and contrast between tumor and healthy tissue was significantly improved (p<0.02) as compared to the standard DWI sequence.