4.1 Article

Diffusion weighted imaging is a promising method to detect acute pyelonephritis in non-sedated free breathing infants

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC UROLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 320-325

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2020.03.027

Keywords

DWI; DMSA; Infant; Pyelonephritis; Ultrasound; Urinary tract infection

Funding

  1. Swedish government
  2. county councils (ALF)
  3. university of Gothenburg
  4. foundation of The Queen Silvia Children's Hospital
  5. Gothenburg society of medicine
  6. Swedish Order of Freemasons in Gothenburg, Sweden

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Introduction Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common disease in infants. The initial evaluation includes imaging to identify risk factors for permanent renal damage, such as malformation and renal parenchymal involvement of the infection i.e. pyelonephritis. 99mTc-Dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scintigraphy is a well-established method for detection of pyelonephritis and renal damage, but has limitations in availability, spatial resolution, and detection of congenital malformations. Diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) has been shown to have a high sensitivity for detection of pyelonephritis in children without the use of invasive procedures, contrast agents or ionizing radiation. How this method performs in young infants during non-sedated free breathing remains, however, to be investigated. Objective To prospectively assess the feasibility and performance of DWI for detection of pyelonephritis in nonsedated free breathing infants. Methods 32 children <6 months of age with first-time symptomatic UTI were examined with DWI and DMSA scintigraphy. The DWI examination was performed using a free breathing protocol without the use of sedation. Pyelonephritic lesions were registered for both methods by independent observers. Agreement between DWI and DMSA was evaluated. Consensus diagnosis was determined and compared to the DWI findings. Results The MRI and DMSA examinations were completed in 25 infants, with a median age of 1.7 (0.7-5.5) months. Focal uptake reductions were detected on the DMSA images in 12 (24%) of the 50 kidneys. The DWI method demonstrated a fair to good agreement with DMSA, k = 0.50 (p < 0.0001). The consensus diagnosis was pyelonephritis in eight (16%) of the 50 kidneys. DWI detected seven of the eight kidneys with pyelonephritis. No false positive findings were detected with DWI compared to consensus diagnosis. Discussion This study has shown an agreement between DWI and DMSA scintigraphy in the detection of pyelonephritis. Further validation of the performance of DWI, using a consensus diagnosis as a reference, confirmed the potential of the method. This feasibility study included a limited number of patients and the results need to be confirmed in a prospective study of a larger cohort. Conclusion Free breathing DWI is a promising method for detection of pyelonephritic lesions in non-sedated infants. [GRAPHICS] .

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