With its superior ability to visualize soft tissue, MRI is becoming an increasingly useful tool in the interventional suite
Magnetic resonance imaging is known as an excellent tool for
noninvasive diagnosis. With the advent of novel fast imaging
technologies and open magnets, MRI is now becoming an imaging tool
for guiding various interventional procedures. Excellent soft
tissue contrast and the ability to visualize lesions in high
resolution are the main reasons for this usage. Currently, various
intervention and biopsy procedures on multiple organs including the
breast, liver, prostate, and brain as well as the heart are being
investigated. Guidance of vascular interventions using MRI is
technically very challenging, but some investigational studies have
already been completed. Complicated interventions on the spine
currently are being guided by magnetic resonance imaging.
Technical Challenges
Jean-Michel Serfaty, MD, a postdoctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins University at the time of the study, manipulates guidewires and catheters under MR guidance to conduct an experimental coronary balloon angioplasty procedure on an animal. Serfaty is now an interventional radiologist at Bichat Hospital, Paris, France.
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There are multiple technical challenges in
guidance interventions under MRI. First, access to the patient in a
conventional 50 to 60 cm-diameter bore-size MRI scanner is rather
difficult. Three alternative strategies are being investigated:
1) Magnets with open architecture are an excellent solution to
the access problem, but one that usually comes with a decrease in
field strength and homogeneity and therefore compromised image
quality. Short magnets solve the access problems in certain
procedures such as vascular intervention where access is necessary
only to the groin of the patient. As a result of competition
between the scanner manufacturers, magnet designs are changing
every year and giving more access options to clinicians.
2) Taking the patient partially out of the magnet during
intervention and carrying on the imaging operation only for
verification of the device position is a simple and very effective
solution for many interventions where real-time image guidance is
not a must. In these types of operations, some MR-visible markers
are placed on the patient and location of the intervention is
estimated based on the relative position of these markers with
respect to target location.
3) Another very attractive solution to the access problem is to
use robots inside the MRI scanner. In this approach, while a robot
manipulates the surgical tool such as a needle, MR images are
continuously acquired to give feedback control to the robot on the
position of the surgical device. The design of the robot is
technically very challenging: it should not contain a significant
amount of ferromagnetic materials. Although plastics are MRI
compatible, their mechanical stability creates engineering
challenges. Furthermore, the space limitation causes significant
problems in the design of the robots. Sense of touch is critical in
most interventional procedures and robots that have haptic feedback
capabilities are being developed. Existence of these strategies
relieves the patient access problem of interventional MRI. Access
to patients in the MRI scanner during an interventional procedure
is no longer a serious problem.
Complete MRI-guided intervention in a circumflex artery. a) Placement of the MRI-guiding catheter (arrowhead) in the ascending aorta using the oblique sagittal view. b) Catheterization with the MRI-guiding catheter (arrowhead) of the left main coronary artery and circumflex artery using the oblique coronal view. c) Real-time projection angiography of the circumflex artery (arrowhead) on an oblique coronal view after injection of diluted gadolinium (31 mM) in the MRI-guiding catheter. d) Placement of the MRI guidewire (arrowhead) in the circumflex artery in the oblique coronal view. The balloon angioplasty catheter can be localized and advanced on the MRI guidewire by using a black artifact created by a platinum ring localized in the center of the balloon angioplasty catheter (long arrow). e) Injection of diluted gadolinium-DTPA (31 mM) in the balloon enhances the balloon on the real-time projection angiography images (long arrow). Oblique coronal view. (From: J.M.Serfaty, Yang X, Foo T, Kumar A, Derbyshire A, Atalar E. MRI-guided coronary catheterization and PTCA: A feasibility study on a dog model. Magn Reson Med 2003;49(2):258-263. Reprinted by permission of Wiley-Liss, Inc, a subsidiary of John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
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The second technical challenge is the requirement
that the equipment used in interventional procedures is MRI
compatible. The high magnetic field of the scanner attracts objects
made out of ferromagnetic materials, and the attraction force
applied to these objects varies based on the composition of the
materials and the shape of the object. It is not uncommon to have
accidents as a result of flying objects. Although the solution is
straightforward, many existing devices, such as physiological
monitoring equipment, are incompatible with MRI. Although there are
companies that offer MR-compatible equipment, their high cost
related to their low sale volume becomes a significant issue. Some
suggest that leaving the MR-incompatible equipment outside the
five-gauss line (outside this region, the magnetic field is
negligibly low) may be sufficient to solve this problem. In this
case, staff training will be a very critical issue. It should be
noted that some of these MR-incompatible devices generate high
electrical noise that disturbs the MR image quality. This is
unacceptable.
Another major technical problem is the visibility of
interventional tools, such as catheters, guidewires, and needles.
Under x-ray, the devices are visible in high resolution, but soft
tissue visualization is very poor. Under MRI guidance, the scenario
is just the opposite: soft tissue visualization is excellent, but
it is difficult to determine the position of the interventional
tools. Many alternatives are being investigated, but the most
common and widely used technique is to employ devices that are made
out of materials that cause slight image distortion. Although the
location of the devices may not appear as precise as they do under
x-ray guidance, in many instances, they create enough artifact to
do the procedure. An alternative to this technique is coating the
catheter with a material that reduces the relaxation constant, or
T1, of the surrounding tissue and therefore the catheter appears
bright. Both of these approaches are called passive visualization.
Active visualization of the interventional devices is achieved by
placing a radiofrequency (RF) antenna on the device, which picks up
a very high signal around the interventional tool. With this
technique, catheter visualization is much easier, but the technique
has been criticized for possibly causing excessive heat around the
antenna. Researchers have developed designs that minimize this
potential risk. While research on interventional device
visualization continues, today viable solutions for this problem do
exist.
Current uses
Most installed MRI scanners are equipped with software suitable
for diagnostic procedures. In the guidance of interventions,
real-time image updates are critical. Specialized pulse sequences
are necessary to accurately and quickly find the position of the
interventional devices while the target is visualized from a
monitor inside the MR scanner room in real time. While active
research is currently under way, MR scanner manufacturers are now
delivering software packages for this purpose.
With the advent of this technology, many interventional
procedures became possible and are currently under development in
the hands of clinical researchers. Some interventional procedures
require further technological development. Here we will touch on a
few procedures in clinical practice.
Although MR-guided breast biopsy is not in routine clinical use,
the effectiveness of this technique has been shown with multiple
studies. Magnetic resonance imaging has very high sensitivity but,
unfortunately, its specificity is rather low. If a biopsy sample
can be taken from the suspected lesion, the accuracy of the
diagnosis will improve significantly. The MR-guided breast biopsy
procedure, which is designed to address this issue, is typically
applied to patients who have suspected lesions and negative
conventional biopsy results. In this procedure, the breast is
gently compressed between two compression plates, one of which has
a grid structure. Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance images
depict the position of the breast lesion very accurately. The
physician measures the position of the lesion with respect to the
grid with the aid of specialized software and calculates needle
insertion position and needle insertion depth. After placement of
the needle, its position is verified with a quick scan, and the
needle is readjusted if necessary and the sample is taken. The
procedure typically takes about 30 to 40 minutes. Both the software
and hardware that are required to conduct these procedures are
commercially available from multiple vendors. The widespread use of
this technique is limited by its high cost.
With a similar technique, MR-guided biopsy of the prostate is
possible. Biopsy of the prostate currently is carried out under
ultrasound guidance. Since ultrasound is practically blind to
prostate tumors, six or more biopsy samples are taken from the
prostate without targeting any lesion. This untargeted biopsy is
known to cause significant false-negative findings and, therefore,
significant delays in cancer treatment. It has been shown that
MR-guided biopsy can be carried out in a open magnet as well as in
a conventional MR scanner with the aid of specialized hardware.
One of the big challenges in brain tumor removal is to define
precise boundaries of the tumor and complete the resection of the
tumor while sparing normal brain tissue. While visual inspection in
brain surgery is the common technique, it has been shown that many
tumors are not removed completely because of the difficulties in
visualization. Although MR-guided brain surgery is currently
conducted in only a handful of research centers, it carries great
potential.
Versatility
As discussed earlier, MRI is a very versatile imaging technique.
One of its capabilities is to image the amount of temperature
change in the body. It has been observed that frequency of the
received MRI signal depends on temperature. Although this
dependence is very small (less than one hertz per degree
temperature change), with very accurate imaging techniques, it is
now possible to image the temperature change in the body within
less than one degree accuracy. This capability of MRI creates an
opportunity for ablation of tumors with high precision. Various
techniques have been developed including ablation with the aid of
RF ablation needles. A recently developed alternative is the use of
focused ultrasound to ablate lesions that are deep inside the body
without a single incision. It has been known for a long time that
ultrasonic energy could be focused in the body with the aid of a
large transducer. However, because of the significant variations of
the speed of sound in the body, the focus location was not known
precisely. Imaging of the temperature variation in the body creates
a unique opportunity to solve this technical problem. While imaging
the tissue using the temperature-imaging technique described
earlier, a small energy is applied to the transducer such that it
does not cause any damage to the tissue but raises the temperature
at the focused region enabling visualization under MRI of the
extent and location of the focused region. This enables
readjustment of the focus for precise ablation of the tumor of
interest without damaging surrounding tissue.
Cryoablation is an alternative to heat therapy. MR can monitor
the size of the iceball formed in the body. This technique is
thought to be very suitable for ablation of liver tumors.
Accurate visualization also is critical in the delivery of
therapeutic agents. One very exciting development is that
magnetically labeled stem cells now can be delivered to lesions
under MR guidance. With this technique, researchers are
investigating the possibility of curing infarcted heart tissue. MR
guidance may play a critical role in solving delivery problems.
Many other possibilities do exist.
As mentioned, in performing vascular interventions under x-ray
guidance, the interventional devices can be visualized very
accurately, but soft tissue is visible in the form of shadows. This
poor visualization creates many technical difficulties for the
vascular interventionalist. With the ability to solve these
visualization problems, MRI is offering a serious alternative to
x-ray in the guidance of some difficult vascular procedures.
Although atherosclerosis is a disease of the vessel wall, the
current treatment techniques are done without seeing the diseased
wall. Instead, the treatment is based on the appearance of the
vessel lumen. With its ability to visualize high soft tissue
contrast, MR guidance offers the possibility of characterization of
atherosclerotic plaques. Although it is not yet determined how this
new information can be used in the treatment of the disease, some
suggest that with the accurate visualization techniques, novel
therapies will emerge.
A further limitation of x-ray guidance is the inability to
visualize the vessels beyond an occluded region due to the fact
that vessel visualization is achieved by injecting contrast agents.
Passing an occlusion, therefore, is a very difficult task, a
problem that is greatly simplified with MR guidance. Similarly, the
portal vein system is invisible under x-ray guidance, because there
is no direct access to this system from the vena cava or any other
means. Patients with advanced cirrhosis sometimes require a bypass
surgery, and with the aid of MRI guidance, this difficult surgery
can be done percutaneously.
Research is ongoing in MR-guided vascular interventions as well
as other nonvascular procedures. I believe that MRI will become a
critical tool in the guidance of many interventional procedures.
For those interested in learning more about interventional MRI, the
5th Interventional MRI Symposium will be held on October 15-16,
2004, in Boston. n