MR-guided Cardiovascular Catheterisation in Children
Submitting Institution
King's College LondonUnit of Assessment
General EngineeringSummary Impact Type
TechnologicalResearch Subject Area(s)
Engineering: Biomedical Engineering
Medical and Health Sciences: Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology, Neurosciences
Summary of the impact
We have developed a new technique of performing cardiac catheterisation
in children and adults with congenital heart disease. This has led to the
commercialisation of hybrid MRI and X-ray cardiac catheterisation
laboratories, a new scientific technique for studying cardiac physiology
and pathology and most importantly is being routinely used in clinical
practice as it dramatically reduces X-ray radiation exposure (by a factor
of 8) and improves the accuracy of physiological measurements leading to
better clinical decision making and impact.
Underpinning research
The translation of MR-guided cardiac catheterisation from an engineering
concept to a clinical reality, required a number of scientific challenges
to be addressed. These are described in this section [1-5] and were
carried out by Razavi (2000-present, Lecturer and subsequently Professor)
and Hill (2000-2005, Senior Lecturer and subsequently Professor) as well
as later work by Razavi and Schaeffter (2006-present, Professor) in the
Division of Imaging Sciences & Biomedical Engineering at KCL.
The first research challenge was to develop an MRI and X-ray cardiac
catheterisation laboratory with the appropriate technical, work-flow and
safety features to allow clinical MRI cardiac catheterisation [1]. This
involved modification of the MRI and X-ray systems to allow a floating
table-top to move between the two modalities, shielding of the image
intensifier to minimise distortion and the set up of a work flow to safely
monitor and move an anaesthetised patient into an MRI scanner and perform
cardiac catheterisation procedures.
The second challenge, was developing safe devices that could be used to
perform cardiac catheterisation procedures in patients [2,3,4,5]. Previous
research had focused on showing feasibility without tackling the safety
issues. The catheters and devices used in those studies had a real risk of
heating in an MRI scanning environment and so causing damage to heart and
vessels. We devised four potential safe techniques of performing catheter
and device visualisation and have moved two of these techniques into
clinical practice.
The first technique used passive visualisation of a non-braided balloon
angiographic catheter filled with carbon dioxide producing a negative
contrast in a steady state free procession real-time sequence [2].
Optimising the echo time and spatial resolution allowed us good
visualisation while performing various catheterisation manoeuvres at 5-10
frames per second in a pulsatile flow phantom. We were then able to show
feasibility in 20 patients and demonstrate catheter guidance to all the
major vessels and left and right-sided cardiac chambers.
The second technique involved using 19F nuclear magnetic resonance in
conjunction with proton imaging [3]. This has the advantage of being able
to automatically track the catheters when they move out of plane. Using a
standard angiographic balloon catheter filled with the blood substitute
perfluorooctylbromide (PFOB) and a limited bandwidth excitation at the
resonances of the CF2 groups of PFOB, we found that sufficient signal
could be received to facilitate tip tracking during catheter motion and
length visualisation for various catheter configurations.
The third technique involved using multiple tuned quadrature fiducial
markers attached to a non-braided standard catheter with an interleaved
real-time interactive sequence with varying flip angles [4]. We were able
to show good visualisation and tracking of the length of the catheter in a
postile flow phantom with minimal heating.
The fourth technique involved a fibreglass guide wire with a nitinol tip
and tiny iron splints affixed along the distal 10 cm for passive
visualisation [5]. This underwent bench testing, feasibility in a large
animal model and, following Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory
Agency approval, was used for performing cardiovascular interventions in
patients with congenital heart disease.
References to the research
1. Cardiac catheterisation guided by MRI in children and adults with
congenital heart disease. Razavi R, Hill DL, Keevil SF, Miquel ME,
Muthurangu V, Hegde S, Rhode K, Barnett M, van Vaals J, Hawkes DJ, Baker
E. Lancet 2003 Dec 6;362(9399):1877-82
2. Visualization and tracking of an inflatable balloon catheter using
SSFP in a flow phantom and in the heart and great vessels of patients.
Miquel ME, Hegde S, Muthurangu V, Corcoran BJ, Keevil SF, Hill DLG, Razavi
RS. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 2004 May;51(5):988-95
3. Catheter tracking and visualization using 19F nuclear magnetic
resonance. Kozerke S, Hegde S, Schaeffter T, Lamerichs R, Razavi R, Hill
DL. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 2004 Sep;52(3):693-7
4. Interactive MR imaging and tracking of catheters with multiple tuned
fiducial markers. Hegde S, Miquel ME, Boubertakh R, Gilderdale D,
Muthurangu V, Keevil SF, Young I, Hill DL, Razavi RS. J Vasc Interv Radiol
2006 Jul;17(7):1175-9
5. Magnetic resonance-guided cardiac interventions using magnetic
resonance-compatible devices: a preclinical study and first-in-man
congenital interventions. Tzifa A, Krombach GA, Krämer N, Krüger S,
Schütte A, von Walter M, Schaeffter T, Qureshi S, Krasemann T, Rosenthal
E, Schwartz CA, Varma G, Buhl A, Kohlmeier A, Bücker A, Günther RW, Razavi
R. Circulation Cardiovascular Intervention. 2010 Dec;3(6):585-92
Grants:
• Jan 2001 - Dec 2004 Centre for Magnetic Resonance Imaging and
Intervention; EPSRC Joint Research Equipment Initiative HEFCA; £1,382,993.
The Charitable Fund for Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital; £200,000. Evelina
Heart fund (The Charitable Fund for Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital);
£42,925. Evelina Children's fund (The Charitable Fund for Guy's and St
Thomas' Hospital); £20,000. Philips Medical Systems UK; £293,967. Philips
Medical Systems NL; £643,000.
• March 2002 - Sept 2005 Use of an interventional MRI system for
diagnostic and interventional cardiac catheterisation of patients with
congenital heart disease; The Charitable Foundation of Guy's and St
Thomas' Hospital; £493,000.
• March 2004 - Feb 2007 Magnetic Resonance Imaging assessment of
pulmonary vascular disease; The Charitable Foundation of Guy's and St
Thomas' Hospital; £193,000.
Details of the impact
Around one child in a hundred is born with a congenital heart defect.
Depending on the severity of the condition, some children will require
cardiac catheterisation as a diagnostic tool or as a curative treatment.
To guide the procedure, images are recorded throughout using X-ray,
exposing children to radiation. Research has shown that children who
undergo even a single procedure are at an increased risk of developing
tumours and cancer in later life [6]. Children are especially vulnerable
to the oncogenic effects of radiation. Tissues and organs that are growing
and developing are more sensitive to radiation effects. Moreover, the
oncogenic effects of radiation require a long latent period (decades) that
varies with the type of malignancy. Therefore children have a longer
lifetime risk of developing radiation-induced cancers.
MRI is a completely radiation free imaging technique and can provide much
better characterisation of cardiovascular anatomy than it is possible with
x-ray. As described above, we developed the technical, work-flow and
safety features and the catheter visualisation techniques needed to
carrying out the first in-man MRI-catheterisation procedures in patients
with congenital heart disease [1]. This new clinical technique that allows
simultaneous measurement of invasive pressure and physiological
measurements such as flow and volume has enabled new avenues of research
and insights into human cardiovascular physiology and pathology [7-14].
We have also shown that this technique has significant benefits for
patients. Firstly, it reduces the X-ray radiation dose by a factor of
eight, which is very important particularly as the majority of patients
undergoing catheterisation for congenital heart disease are children [7,
15]. Secondly, it improves the accuracy of physiological measurements like
the measurement of pulmonary-vascular resistance (PVR) [8,9] - important
in making decisions about treatment such as judging whether the risk of
going ahead with palliative or corrective surgery is justified. The
previous technique has a bias of up to 54% with limits of agreement from
154% to -66%.
In congenital heart disease, making decision on whether to proceed with
surgical palliation or other interventions, versus continuing conservative
management, can often be very difficult. This is because there is not
population-based data on outcomes, because of the complexity and large
variation in the type of abnormality. Having more accurate measurement of
physiology, only made possible by the technologies we have developed,
means that now we can start to make decisions on the basis of these
measurements and, for example, know that PVR of over 4 dyne.sec/cm5
in children with a uni-ventricular circulation and over 6 dyne.sec/cm5
in a bi-ventricular circulation, would be too high risk to move forward
with palliative or corrective surgery [7, 15].
We have worked with Philips Healthcare to develop the concept of a
combined MRI and X-ray clinical cardiovascular catheterisation laboratory
(the first research challenge described in section 2) which has led to the
CE marking and commercial release of the first such product by Philips
Healthcare in 2004 [15]. Based on the concept we developed, similar
systems have subsequently been released by Siemens and GE [15]. These
systems are installed in 15 leading academic health science centres across
the world and are used for cutting edge clinical research and for the care
of complex patients such as those with congenital heart disease.
MRI guided cardiac catheterisation, has been adopted as best practice at
the Evelina Children's Hospital, London - one of the ten major paediatric
cardiac centres in the UK [7]. The practice has extended its reach
nationally and internationally to hospitals such as Great Ormond Street
Hospital, London [12], German Heart Centre, Berlin, Germany [13] and
Children's National Medical Centre, Washington DC, USA [14] enhancing the
quality of care for patients with congenital heart disease.
Our research activities have led to the development of a new commercial
product, the hybrid MRI X-ray cardiac catheterisation laboratory, the
development of a new technique for assessing cardiac physiology in
patients and a better way of performing cardiac catheterisation in
children and adults with congenital heart disease, which has been adopted
as routine practice at the Evelina Children's Hospital, London and also
used in centres around the world.
Sources to corroborate the impact
- Radiation risk from pediatric cardiac catheterization: friendly fire
on children with congenital heart disease. Andreassi MG. Circulation
2009;120:1847-9.
- Diagnostic and interventional MRI catheterization: A 10-year single
center experience Tzifa A, Pushparajah K, Valverde I, Bell A, Hussain T,
Wong J, Beerbaum P, Greil G, Bellsham-Revell H, Rosenthal E, Krasemann
T, Simpson J, Miller O, Qureshi S, Schaffter T, Razavi R. Circulation
abstract from Association for European Paediatric Cardiology meeting
London May 2013 published Cardiology in the Young 2013 May Volume 23
Supplement 1 page S18
- Novel method of quantifying pulmonary vascular resistance by use of
simultaneous invasive pressure monitoring and phase-contrast magnetic
resonance flow. Muthurangu V, Taylor A, Andriantsimiavona R, Hegde S,
Miquel ME, Tulloh R, Baker E, Hill DL, Razavi RS. Circulation. 2004 Aug
17;110(7):826-34.
- Magnetic resonance imaging guided catheterisation for assessment of
pulmonary vascular resistance: in vivo validation and clinical
application in patients with pulmonary hypertension. Kuehne T, Yilmaz S,
Schulze-Neick I, Wellnhofer E, Ewert P, Nagel E, Lange P. Heart. 2005
Aug;91(8):1064-9
- Measurement of total pulmonary arterial compliance using invasive
pressure monitoring and MR flow quantification during MR-guided cardiac
catheterization. Muthurangu V, Atkinson D, Sermesant M, Miquel ME, Hegde
S, Johnson R, Andriantsimiavona R, Taylor AM, Baker E, Tulloh R, Hill D,
Razavi RS. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2005 Sep;289(3):H1301-6
- Integrated assessment of diastolic and systolic ventricular function
using diagnostic cardiac magnetic resonance catheterization: validation
in pigs and application in a clinical pilot study. Schmitt B, Steendijk
P, Lunze K, Ovroutski S, Falkenberg J, Rahmanzadeh P, Maarouf N, Ewert
P, Berger F, Kuehne T. JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 2009 Nov;2(11):1271-81
- Comparison of bare metal stenting and percutaneous pulmonary valve
implantation for treatment of right ventricular outflow tract
obstruction: use of an x-ray/magnetic resonance hybrid laboratory for
acute physiological assessment. Lurz P, Nordmeyer J, Muthurangu V,
Khambadkone S, Derrick G, Yates R, Sury M, Bonhoeffer P, Taylor AM.
Circulation. 2009 Jun 16;119(23):2995-3001
- Pulmonary vascular resistance, collateral flow, and ventricular
function in patients with a Fontan circulation at rest and during
dobutamine stress. Schmitt B, Steendijk P, Ovroutski S, Lunze K,
Rahmanzadeh P, Maarouf N, Ewert P, Berger F, Kuehne T. Circ Cardiovasc
Imaging. 2010 Sep;3(5):623-31
- Real-time MRI-guided right heart catheterization in adults using
passive catheters. Ratnayaka K, Faranesh AZ, Hansen MS, Stine AM, Halabi
M, Barbash IM, Schenke WH, Wright VJ, Grant LP, Kellman P, Kocaturk O,
Lederman RJ. Eur Heart J. 2013 Feb;34(5):380-9
- Letters from Philips Healthcare and Siemens Healthcare on file, and
presentation slides from Association of European Paediatric Cardiology
Meeting, London, May 2013 at: http://www.kcl.ac.uk/medicine/research/divisions/imaging/ref.aspx