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Title: Motion-robust magnetic resonance fingerprinting (mr-mrf) for quantitative liver cancer imaging
Authors: Liu, C 
Li, T 
Wang, L 
Wong, YL
Wang, M
Zhang, H
Wang, Z
Xiao, H
Zhi, S 
Li, W 
Zhang, J 
Teng, X 
Lee, VHF
Cao, P
Cai, J 
Issue Date: 14-Feb-2026
Source: Physics in medicine and biology, 14 Feb. 2026, v. 71, no. 3, 035015
Abstract: Objective. This study aims to develop a motion-robust magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MR-MRF) technique for liver cancer imaging to eliminate the need for breath-hold scanning.
Approach. To mitigate respiratory motion artifacts in free-breathing abdominal MRF, the MR-MRF technique comprising two core components. First, respiratory motion is modeled by applying an isotropic total variation (TV)-regularized registration algorithm between a target end-of-exhalation (EOE) phase and three motion phases. Second, motion-resolved tissue property maps are reconstructed using a low-rank TV optimization framework, which incorporates the estimated inter-phase motion to align all acquired MRF dynamics to the EOE phase. MR-MRF is evaluated by 22 patients (mean age, 62 years ± 10 [SD]; 15 males and 7 females) with hepatocellular carcinoma. Radiologist’s blinded assessment and organ boundary sharpness measurements are performed to evaluate the image quality of MR-MRF-derived tissue maps. The test-retest tissue quantification repeatability is assessed by two consecutive MRF scans with distinct breathing patterns. Paired Student’s t-test is used for statistical significance analysis with a p-value threshold of 0.05.
Main results. MR-MRF achieved successful reconstruction of motion-resolved tissue maps at EOE phase, with blinded radiologist assessment yielding an average score of 3 (moderate quality—sufficient for diagnosis) for overall image impression. The FWHM of organ boundaries in MR-MRF-derived tissue maps is 3.1 mm ± 1.7 mm, significantly lower than motion-blurred tissue maps (9.9 mm ± 3.4 mm, p-value < 0.0001). Test-retest analysis demonstrated good repeatability: liver coefficient of variation was 5.5% ± 7.1% (T1), 8.2% ± 4.4% (T2), and 5.0% ± 2.0% (PD), with excellent linear agreement (R2 = 0.96, 0.80, and 0.85 for T1, T2, and PD, respectively).
Significance. This study establishes the technical foundation of MR-MRF to achieve repeatable and quantitative liver T1/T2/PD mapping under free-breathing conditions at 3 T. The results validate the feasibility of addressing respiratory motion in abdominal multi-parametric quantitative MRI.
Keywords: Liver cancer
Magnetic resonance fingerprinting
Magnetic resonance imaging
Motion robust
Respiratory motion blurring
Publisher: Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd.
Journal: Physics in medicine and biology 
ISSN: 0031-9155
EISSN: 1361-6560
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/ae3b03
Rights: © 2026 The Author(s). Published on behalf of Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine by IOP Publishing Ltd
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
The following publication Liu, C., Li, T., Wang, L., Wong, Y.-L., Wang, M., Zhang, H., Wang, Z., Xiao, H., Zhi, S., Li, W., Zhang, J., Teng, X., Lee, V. H.-f., Cao, P., & Cai, J. (2026). Motion-robust magnetic resonance fingerprinting (MR-MRF) for quantitative liver cancer imaging. Physics in Medicine & Biology, 71(3), 035015 is available at https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/ae3b03.
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