Disposable Perfusion Phantom for Accurate DCE (Dynamic Contrast Enhanced)-MRI Measurement of Pancreatic Cancer Therapy Response
Ohio State University
Summary
The goal of this study is to investigate whether the therapeutic response of pancreatic tumors can be accurately assessed using quantitative DCE-MRI, when the inter/intra-scanner variability is reduced using the Point-of-care Portable Perfusion Phantom, P4. The intra-scanner variability over time leads to errors in therapy monitoring, while the inter-scanner variability impedes the comparison of data among institutes. The P4 is small enough to be imaged concurrently in the bore of a standard MRI scanner with a patient for real-time quality assurance. The P4 is safe, inexpensive and easily operable, thus it has great potential for widespread and routine clinical use for accurate diagnosis, prognosis and therapy monitoring. This study has identified two arms, one arm is healthy individuals that will undergo DCE MRI at three different MRI locations to establish baseline results. The healthy volunteers will undergo these MRIs prior to the second arm, which contains patients with pancreatic cancer. The pancreatic cancer patients will only have DCE MRI done at one location.
Eligibility
- Age range
- 19+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Healthy Volunteer - a small number of healthy volunteers (5) will be used as the control group. Inclusion Criteria: * Targeted/planned enrollment in the study will include all racial/ethnic groups with no groups excluded on the basis of race, ethnicity or gender. * Participants should be 19 years of age or older * Participants should not have any known major health problems including but not limited to cancers, heart diseases, diabetes, high blood pressure and/or cholesterol, stroke, respiratory problems, and arthritis. Exclusion Criteria: * Participants having any known major health probl…
Interventions
- DevicePoint-of-care Portable Perfusion Phantom, P4
P4 is a perfusion phantom developed by Dr. Harrison Kim that can significantly reduce variation in quantitating perfusion of human abdominal tissues across MRI scanners.
Locations (2)
- The Ohio State UniversityColumbus, Ohio
- Vanderbilt University Medical CenterNashville, Tennessee