Measurement of subtle blood-brain barrier disruption in cerebral small vessel disease using dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging
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Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is a common cause of strokes and dementia. The pathogenesis of
SVD is poorly understood, but imaging and biochemical investigations suggest that subtle blood-brain
barrier (BBB) leakage may contribute to tissue damage. The most widely-used imaging method for
assessing BBB integrity and other microvascular properties is dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance
imaging (DCE-MRI). DCE-MRI has primarily been applied in situations where contrast uptake
in tissue is typically large and rapid (e.g. neuro-oncology); the optimal approach for quantifying BBB
integrity in diseases where the BBB remains largely intact and the reliability of resulting measurements
is unclear. The main purpose of this thesis was to assess and improve the reliability of quantitative
assessment of subtle BBB disruption, in order to illuminate its potential role in cerebral SVD.
Firstly, a systematic literature review was performed in order to provide an overview of DCE-MRI
methods in the brain. This review found large variations in MRI procedures and data analysis methods,
resulting in widely varying estimates of tracer kinetic parameters. Secondly, this thesis focused on
the analysis of DCE-MRI data acquired in an on-site clinical study of mild stroke patients. After
performing basic DCE-MRI processing (e.g. selection of a vascular input function), this work aimed
to determine the tracer kinetic modelling approach most suitable for assessing subtle BBB disruption in
this cohort. Using data-driven model selection and computer simulations, the Patlak model was found
to provide accurate estimates of blood plasma volume and low-level BBB leakage. Thirdly, this thesis
aimed to investigate two potential pitfalls in the quantification of subtle BBB disruption. Contrast-free
measurements in healthy volunteers revealed that a signal drift of approximately 0.1 %/min occurs
during the DCE-MRI acquisition; computer simulations showed that this drift introduces significant
systematic errors when estimating low-level tracer kinetic parameters. Furthermore, tracer kinetic
analysis was performed in an external patient cohort in order to investigate the inter-study comparability
of DCE-MRI measurements. Due to the nature of the acquisition protocol it proved difficult to obtain
reliable estimates of BBB leakage, highlighting the importance of study design. Lastly, this thesis
examined the relationship between quantitative MRI parameters and clinical measurements in cerebral
SVD, with a focus on the estimates of blood volume and BBB leakage obtained in the internal SVD
patient cohort. This work did not provide evidence that BBB leakage in normal-appearing tissue
increases with SVD burden or predicts disease progression; however, increased BBB leakage was found
in white matter hyperintensities. Furthermore, this work raises the possibility of a role for blood plasma
volume and dietary salt intake in cerebral SVD.
The work described in this thesis has demonstrated that it is possible to estimate subtle BBB disruption
using DCE-MRI, provided that the measurement and data analysis strategies are carefully optimised.
However, absolute values of tracer kinetic parameters should be interpreted with caution, particularly
when making comparisons between studies, and sources of error and their influence should be estimated
where possible. The exact roles of BBB breakdown and other microvascular changes in SVD pathology
remain to be defined; however, the work presented in this thesis contributes further insights and, together
with technical advances, will facilitate improved study design in the future.
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