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Title: Diagnosis of chronic pancreatitis by using apparent diffusion coefficient measurements at 3.0-T MR following secretin stimulation. Author: Akisik MF, Sandrasegaran K, Jennings SG, Aisen AM, Lin C, Sherman S, Rydberg MP. Journal: Radiology; 2009 Aug; 252(2):418-25. PubMed ID: 19508986. Abstract: PURPOSE: To prospectively measure pancreatic apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) before and after secretin administration in subjects with and without chronic pancreatitis (CP) who underwent magnetic resonance (MR) cholangiopancreatography with diffusion-weighted (DW) imaging at 3.0 T. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Institutional review board approval of this HIPAA-compliant study was obtained. Healthy volunteers, and patients with suspected and/or known CP who were scheduled for MR cholangiopancreatography, were recruited and gave written informed consent. All subjects underwent 3.0-T MR cholangiopancreatography, including serial DW imaging sequences (b = 0, 200, and 400 sec/mm(2)) acquired for 15 minutes after secretin administration. The referring gastroenterologist then classified subjects as healthy or with mild or severe CP, given endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatographic and/or clinical findings. CP severity was analyzed for sex and age. Mean presecretin and maximum postsecretin ADCs were compared between groups. Pairwise mean ADCs for healthy versus mild CP patient groups, healthy versus severe CP patient groups, and mild versus severe CP patient groups were compared. Presecretin ADC threshold levels for CP discrimination were calculated (P < .05). RESULTS: Thirty-two subjects were imaged; four CP patients were excluded owing to severe artifact, and the remaining 28 (15 healthy patients, five with mild CP, and eight with severe CP) comprised the study population. All CP patients had endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatographic confirmation of CP. Mild or severe CP patients were older than healthy patients; sex distribution did not vary among groups. Mean presecretin and maximum postsecretin ADCs were higher in healthy patients than in either mild or severe CP groups (P < .01), but did not vary between mild and severe CP groups (P = .25-0.28). An ADC of less than 220 x 10(-5) mm(2)/sec was optimal for delineating between healthy and CP patients. CONCLUSION: Pancreatic ADC obtained with DW imaging at 3.0 T prior to secretin administration may help diagnose CP; postsecretin ADC response does not distinguish CP severity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]