RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A Prospective Trial of 3T and 1.5T Time-of-Flight and Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography in the Follow-Up of Coiled Intracranial Aneurysms JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology SP 912 OP 918 DO 10.3174/ajnr.A1932 VO 31 IS 5 A1 T.J. Kaufmann A1 J. Huston III A1 H.J. Cloft A1 J. Mandrekar A1 L. Gray A1 M.A. Bernstein A1 J.L. Atkinson A1 D.F. Kallmes YR 2010 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/31/5/912.abstract AB BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Endovascularly coiled intracranial aneurysms are increasingly being followed up with noninvasive MRA imaging to evaluate for aneurysm recurrences. It has not been well-established which MRA techniques are best for this application, however. Our aim was to prospectively compare 4 MRA techniques, TOF and CE-MRA at 1.5T and 3T, to a reference standard of DSA in the evaluation of previously endovascularly coiled intracranial aneurysms. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty-eight subjects with 63 previously coiled intracranial aneurysms underwent all 4 MRA techniques within 8 days of DSA. There were 2 outcome variables: coil occlusion class (class 1, complete; class 2, dog ear; class 3, residual neck; class 4, aneurysm filling) and change in degree of occlusion since the previous comparison. Sensitivity and specificity were computed for each MRA technique relative to the reference standard of DSA. Differences among the MRA techniques were evaluated in pair-wise fashion by using the McNemar test. RESULTS: For the detection of any aneurysm remnant, the sensitivity was 85%–90% for all MRA techniques. Sensitivity dropped to 50%–67% when calculated for the detection of only the class 3 and 4 aneurysm remnants, because several class 3 and 4 remnants were misclassified as class 2 by MRA. CE-MRA at 1.5T and 3T misclassified fewer of the class 3 and 4 remnants than did TOF-MRA at 1.5T, as reflected by the significantly greater sensitivity for larger aneurysm remnants with CE-MRA relative to TOF-MRA at 1.5T (P = .0455 for both comparisons). CONCLUSIONS: CE-MRA is more likely than TOF-MRA to classify larger aneurysm remnants appropriately. We recommend performing both CE-MRA and TOF-MRA in the follow-up of coiled intracranial aneurysms and at 3T if available. ASNRAmerican Society of NeuroradiologyCAQCertificate of Added QualificationCEcontrast-enhancedDSAdigital subtraction angiographyLOClocationsMIPmaximum intensity projectionMRAMR angiographySNRsignal intensity–to noise ratioSPGRspoiled gradient-recalled echoTOFtime-of-flight