DOI: 10.1002/jmri.70396 ISSN: 1053-1807

Mapping Fatty Acid Composition in the Human Knee: Short‐Term Repeatability at 3T

Dimitri Martel, Anne Adlung, Baptiste Busi, Rollanda Bernadin, Yagni Shah, Thorsten Kirsch, Richard Kijowski, Guillaume Madelin, Amparo Ruiz

ABSTRACT

Background

Alterations in periarticular lipid composition are implicated in musculoskeletal diseases, yet short‐term reliability of MRI‐based triglyceride composition mapping in the knee is not fully established.

Purpose

To evaluate 1‐week repeatability of proton‐density fat fraction (PDFF) and triglyceride fatty‐acid composition—saturated (SFA), monounsaturated (MUFA), and polyunsaturated (PUFA)—in periarticular knee tissues.

Study Type

Prospective.

Population

Ten healthy adults (5 female, 5 male; age 32 ± 8 years; BMI 23.5 ± 2.4 kg/m 2 ).

Field Strength/Sequence

3T; 12‐echo 3D spoiled gradient‐echo acquisition for chemical shift—encoded fat quantification and a proton density—weighted SPACE sequence for segmentation (0.6 mm isotropic).

Assessment

Participants underwent repeated MRI 1 week apart. Femoral and tibial bone marrow, patella, Hoffa's fat pad, prefemoral fat pad, quadriceps fat pad, posterior fat pad, and subcutaneous adipose tissue were segmented and rigidly aligned. Voxelwise spectral fitting was used to estimate PDFF and fatty acid composition, including SFA, MUFA, and PUFA components. Repeatability metrics included bias, within‐subject standard deviation (wSD), within‐subject coefficient of variation (wCV%), coefficient of repeatability, and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC).

Statistical Tests

Paired t ‐tests assessed systematic differences ( α  = 0.05); ICCs used a two‐way random‐effects, absolute‐agreement model (ICC(2,1)).

Results

PDFF showed lowest variability across all regions (wCV: 1.5%–5.9%; ICC: 0.33–0.96). SFA demonstrated similar stability (wCV: 2.4%–12.6%; ICC: 0.19–0.87). MUFA exhibited anatomy‐dependent reliability (wCV: 4.1%–21.1%; ICC: 0.17–0.97), with highest repeatability in subcutaneous adipose tissue (ICC: 0.97) and Hoffa's fat pad (ICC: 0.85). PUFA displayed the greatest variability (wCV: 3.6%–52.8%; ICC: 0.10–0.94), with the greatest instability in periarticular fat pads. No paired comparisons were significant (all p  > 0.05; range p  = 0.14–0.98). Regional ordering remained consistent across sessions.

Data Conclusion

A 12‐echo chemical shift–encoded MRI protocol provides repeatable PDFF and SFA measurements over 1 week. MUFA reliability varies by tissue, while PUFA remains least stable.

Evidence Level

2 (Prospective cohort).

Technical Efficacy Stage

2 (Reproducibility/feasibility evaluation).

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