4.3 Article

Magnetic resonance imaging criteria at onset to differentiate pediatric multiple sclerosis from acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: A nationwide cohort study

Journal

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND RELATED DISORDERS
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.msard.2022.103738

Keywords

Magnetic resonance imaging; Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis; Multiple sclerosis; Pediatric

Funding

  1. Danish MS Society [A29625, A31526, A33178, A35179, A38303, A39760]
  2. Dagmar Marshalls Fond
  3. Axel Muusfeldts Fond
  4. Bent Bogh og Hustrus Fond
  5. Helene og Viggo Bruuns Fond

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This study investigated the use of MRI to differentiate pediatric MS from ADEM and validated different MRI criteria. The results showed that specific MRI features can accurately distinguish between these two diseases.
Background: MRI of the nervous system is the critical in distinguishing pediatric MS from acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM). Our aim was to propose MRI criteria to distinguish MS from monophasic ADEM based on the first MRI and to validate previously proposed MRI criteria. Methods: A neuroradiologist undertook retrospective evaluation of the MRI at the first demyelinating event in children (<18 years) with medical record-validated MS and ADEM in Denmark during 2008-15. We used for-ward stepwise logistic regression to identify MRI categories that differed significantly between MS and ADEM. We estimated accuracy statistics for all MRI criteria to distinguish MS from ADEM. Results: The monophasic ADEM cohort (n=46) was nationwide and population-based during 2008-15; the me-dian age at onset of 5.3 years (range 0.8-17.2) and children had at least five years of follow-up to ensure a monophasic disease course. Children with MS (n=67) had a median age at onset of 16.3 years (range 3.3-17.9). Having at least two categories best distinguished MS from monophasic ADEM by an area under the curve of 83% to 89%: (a) corpus callosum long axis perpendicular lesion; (b) only well-defined lesions; (c) absence of basal ganglia or thalamus lesion OR, (a) corpus callosum long axis perpendicular lesion; (b) only well-defined lesions; (c) absence of diffuse large lesions; (d) black holes. The Callen, KIDMUS, and IPMSSG criteria performed well. The McDonald 2017, Barkhof, MAGNIMS, and Verhey criteria had poorer performance. Conclusion: This study provides Class II evidence that MRI has good performance in differentiating MS from monophasic ADEM at onset.

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