4.6 Article

Equivalence and precision of knee cartilage morphometry between different segmentation teams, cartilage regions, and MR acquisitions

Journal

OSTEOARTHRITIS AND CARTILAGE
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 869-879

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.joca.2012.04.005

Keywords

Magnetic resonance; Knee; Cartilage; Morphometry; Quantitation; Osteoarthritis

Funding

  1. NIAMS/NIH [N01-AR-2-2258]
  2. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
  3. NIAMS [N01-AR-2-2258, N01-AR-2-2261, N01-AR-2-2262]
  4. NIH/NIAMS

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Objective: To compare precision and evaluate equivalence of femorotibial cartilage volume (VC) and mean cartilage thickness over total area of bone (ThCtAB.Me) from independent segmentation teams using identical Magnetic Resonance (MR) images from three series: sagittal 3D Dual Echo in the Steady State (DESS), coronal multi-planar reformat (DESS-MPR) of DESS and coronal 3D Fast Low Angle SHot (FLASH). Design: Nineteen subjects underwent test-retest MR imaging at 3 T. Four teams segmented the cartilage using prospectively defined plate regions and rules. Mixed models analysis of the pooled data were used to evaluate the effect of acquisition, team and plate on precision and Pearson correlations and mixed models were used to evaluate equivalence. Results: Segmentation team differences dominated measurement variability in most cartilage regions for all image series. Precision of VC and ThCtAB.Me differed significantly by team and cartilage plate, but not between FLASH and DESS. Mean values of VC and ThCtAB.Me differed by team (P < 0.05) for DESS, FLASH and DESS-MPR. FLASH VC was 4-6% larger than DESS in the medial tibia and lateral central femur, and FLASH ThCtAB.Me was 5-6% larger ill the medial tibia, but 4-8% smaller in the medial central femur. Correlations between DESS and RASH for VC and ThCtAB.Me were high (r = 0.90-0.97), except for DESS vs FLASH medial central femur ThCtAB.Me (r = 0.81-0.83). Conclusions: Cartilage morphology metrics from different image contrasts had similar precision, were generally equivalent, and may be combined for cross-sectional analyses if potential systematic offsets are accounted for. Data from different teams should not be pooled unless equivalence is demonstrated for cartilage metrics of interest. (C) 2012 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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