AUTHOR=Baum Thomas , Rohrmeier Alexander , Syväri Jan , Diefenbach Maximilian N. , Franz Daniela , Dieckmeyer Michael , Scharr Andreas , Hauner Hans , Ruschke Stefan , Kirschke Jan S. , Karampinos Dimitrios C. TITLE=Anatomical Variation of Age-Related Changes in Vertebral Bone Marrow Composition Using Chemical Shift Encoding-Based Water–Fat Magnetic Resonance Imaging JOURNAL=Frontiers in Endocrinology VOLUME=Volume 9 - 2018 YEAR=2018 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/endocrinology/articles/10.3389/fendo.2018.00141 DOI=10.3389/fendo.2018.00141 ISSN=1664-2392 ABSTRACT=Assessment of vertebral bone marrow composition has been proposed as imaging biomarker for osteoporosis, hematopoietic and metabolic disorders. We investigated the anatomical variation of age-related changes of vertebral proton density fat fraction (PDFF) using chemical shift encoding-based water–fat MRI. 156 healthy subjects were recruited (age range 20-29 years: 12/30 males/females; 30-39: 15/9; 40-49: 4/14; 50-59: 9/27; 60-69: 5/19; 70-79: 4/8). An eight-echo 3D spoiled gradient-echo sequence at 3T MRI was used for chemical shift-encoding based water–fat separation at the lumbar spine. Vertebral bodies of L1-L4 were manually segmented to extract PDFF values at each vertebral level. PDFF averaged over L1-L4 was significantly (p<0.05) higher in males than females in the Twenties (32.0±8.0% vs. 27.2±6.0%) and Thirties (35.3±6.7% vs. 27.3±6.2%). With increasing age females showed an accelerated fatty conversion of the bone marrow compared to men with no significant (p>0.05) mean PDFF differences in the Forties (32.4±8.4% vs. 34.5±6.8%) and Fifties (42.0±6.1% vs. 40.5±9.7%). The accelerated conversion process continued resulting in greater mean PDFF values in females than males in the Sixties (40.2±6.9% vs. 48.8±7.7%; p=0.033) and Seventies (43.9±7.6% vs. 50.5±8.2%; p=0.208), though the latter did not reach statistical significance. Relative age-related PDFF change from the Twenties to the Seventies increased from 16.7% (L1) to 51.4% (L4) in males and 76.8% (L1) to 85.7% (L4) in females. An accelerated fatty conversion of bone marrow was observed in females with increasing age particularly evident after menopause. Relative age-related PDFF changes showed an anatomical variation with most pronounced changes at lower lumbar vertebral levels in both sexes.