Dr. Niklas Klümper
Department of Urology and Institute of Experimental Oncology
niklas.kluemper@ukbonn.de View member: Dr. Niklas Klümper
European radiology experimental
OBJECTIVE: New magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) gradient technology enables the acquisition of ultrahigh b-value diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). We assessed its impact on image quality and Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) scores in prostate MRI.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Participants with cancer suspicion prospectively underwent 3-T prostate MRI (maximum gradient strength 200 mT/m). Sequences with b-values of 0/800, 1,500, 2,500, 3,500, and 4,500 s/mm² were acquired. Lesion conspicuity was rated from 1 (non-diagnostic) to 5 (excellent). Apparent signal-to-noise ratios (aSNR) and acquisition times were determined. Cumulative link mixed-effects models, repeated measures ANOVA, and Cohen/Fleiss κ statistics were used.
RESULTS: A total of 107 participants, aged 67 ± 8 years (mean ± standard deviation), were included. Compared to DWI(b1500), the DWI(b2500), DWI(b3500), and DWI(b4500) acquisitions were worse regarding both lesion conspicuity (median score, 5 [interquartile interval 4-5] versus 4 [3-4] versus 2 [2-3] versus 2 [1-2], respectively; all p < 0.001) and aSNR (19.0 ± 7.5 versus 12.7 ± 4.8 versus 11.8 ± 4.1 versus 11.4 ± 2.6, respectively; all p < 0.001). Acquisition times increased from DWI(b1500) (107 ± 9 s) to DWI(b4500) (329 ± 26 s). Cohen κ for PI-RADS score agreement was good to moderate (DWI(b2500): 0.87 [confidence interval 0.81, 0.94]; DWI(b3500): 0.75 [0.65, 0.84]; DWI(4500): 0.61 [0.49, 0.72]).
CONCLUSION: Acquired ultrahigh gradient DWI sequences with ultrahigh b-values in prostate MRI had worse image quality than standard b-values, while PI-RADS agreement between DWI(b1500) and DWI(b2500) was good. However, diagnostic estimates for clinically significant prostate carcinoma remained limited due to a small biopsy sample size (50/107 patients).
RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Ultrahigh b-value DWI showed no improved diagnostic performance in comparison to standard b-value DWI regarding the identification of potential prostate cancer. Ultrahigh b-value should not replace standard high b-values (1,500 s/mm²) for imaging workup of patients with suspicion for prostate cancer.
KEY POINTS: Acquired ultrahigh b-values (b2500-4500) using ultrahigh gradients of up to 140 T/m were utilized for prostate DWI. Both, overall image quality and diagnostic confidence decreased from good for DWI(b1500) to non-diagnostic for DWI(b4500). PI-RADS agreement between DWI(b1500) and DWI(b2500) was good, while it was only moderate between DWI(b1500) and DWI(b4500).
© 2026. The Author(s).
PMID: 41729479
Department of Urology and Institute of Experimental Oncology
niklas.kluemper@ukbonn.de View member: Dr. Niklas Klümper