The impact of B1+ inhomogeneity on image quality metrics and morphometric statistical inferences at 7 T MRI

Journal: medRxiv
Published Date:

Abstract

Introduction: Structural neuroimaging relies on T1-weighted (T1w) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for brain morphometry, yet at 7 Tesla (7 T) transmit field (B1+) inhomogeneity remains a major source of bias. Although Magnetization Prepared 2 Rapid Acquisition Gradient Echoes (MP2RAGE) improves the tissue contrast, residual B1+ effects may persist and may be exacerbated in aging or clinical populations, where anatomical and physiological factors further challenge image quality and preprocessing. The impact of B1+ inhomogeneity on automated quality assessment and morphometric statistical inference remains insufficiently understood. Methods: Submillimeter 7 T MP2RAGE brain acquisitions from carriers of a mitochondrial gene mutation (m.3243A>G) and controls were retrieved from previous studies. Image quality before and after B1+ inhomogeneity correction was assessed by multiple automated pipelines. Case-control morphometric studies, including regional volume and mean cortical thickness, were analyzed in both registration based and deep learning based segmentation frameworks. Changes in image quality metrics (IQMs) and morphometric statistical significance were evaluated to determine the impact of B1+ inhomogeneity correction. Results: Overall image quality rating and metrics sensitive to intensity non-uniformity and topological integrity consistently improved after B1+ inhomogeneity correction. However, its impact on morphometric statistical inferences was strongly method-dependent. Some pipelines showed redistribution of significant regions, whereas others predominantly demonstrated increased effects in sensitivity. Across methods, B1+ inhomogeneity correction altered the findings of morphometric analyses, particularly in cortical regions. Conclusion: Residual B1+ inhomogeneity at 7 T substantially influences both image quality control and morphometric evaluations. Current automated quality control approaches can hardly capture these effects reliably. B1+ inhomogeneity correction will not only improve intensity uniformity, but also change sensitivity of morphometric statistical inferences. To establish reliable morphometric biomarkers at UHF strengths, explicit B1+ correction and customized preprocessing are practically necessary and highly recommended.

Authors

  • Liu
  • K.; Uludag
  • K.; de Coo
  • I. F. M.; Smeets
  • H. J. M.; Jansen
  • J. F. A.; Formisano
  • E.; Poser
  • B. A.; Haast
  • R. A. M.; Ivanov
  • D.