4.7 Article

MRI-based Synthetic CT in the Detection of Structural Lesions in Patients with Suspected Sacroiliitis: Comparison with MRI

Journal

RADIOLOGY
Volume 298, Issue 2, Pages 343-349

Publisher

RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMERICA
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2020201537

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The study findings suggest that MRI-based synthetic CT has superior diagnostic performance in detecting structural lesions in the sacroiliac joints compared to traditional T1-weighted MRI, showing higher accuracy in the detection of erosions, sclerosis, and ankylosis.
Background: Evaluation of structural lesions in the sacroiliac (SI) joints can improve the accuracy for diagnosis of spondyloarthritis. However, structural lesions, such as erosions, are difficult to assess on routine T1-weighted MRI scans. Purpose: To determine the diagnostic performance of MRI-based synthetic CT (sCT) in the depiction of erosions, sclerosis, and ankylosis of the SI joints compared with T1-weighted MRI, with CT as the reference standard. Materials and Methods: A prospective study (clinical trial registration no. B670201837885) was performed from February 2019 to November 2019. Adults were referred from a tertiary hospital rheumatology outpatient clinic with clinical suspicion of inflammatory sacroiliitis. MRI and CT of the SI joints were performed on the same day. SCT images were generated from MRI scans using a commercially available deep learning-based image synthesis method. Two readers independently recorded if structural lesions (erosions, sclerosis, and ankylosis) were present on T1-weighted MRI, sCT, and CT scans in different reading sessions, with readers blinded to clinical information and other images. Diagnostic performance of sCT and T1-weighted MRI scans were analyzed using generalized estimating equation models, with consensus results of CT as the reference standard. Results: Thirty participants were included (16 men, 14 women; mean age, 40 years +/- 10 [standard deviation]). Diagnostic accuracy of sCT was higher than that of T1-weighted MRI for erosion (94% vs 86%, P =.003), sclerosis (97% vs 81%, P<.001), and ankylosis (92% vs 84%, P =.04). With sCT, specificity for erosion detection (96% [95% CI: 90, 98] vs 89% [95% CI: 81, 94], P =.01] and sensitivity for detection of sclerosis [94% [95% CI: 87, 97] vs 20% [95% CI: 10, 35], P<.001] and ankylosis (93% [95% CI: 78, 98] vs 70% [95% CI: 47, 87], P =.001) were improved. Conclusion: With CT as the reference standard, synthetic CT of the sacroiliac joints has better diagnostic performance in the detection of structural lesions in individuals suspected of having sacroiliitis compared with routine T1-weighted MRI. (C) RSNA, 2020

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