4.5 Article

Common incidental findings on sacroiliac joint MRI: Added value of MRI-based synthetic CT

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Volume 158, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2022.110651

Keywords

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); Deep learning; Synthetic computed tomography; Sacroiliac joint; Sacroiliitis

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The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of incidental findings on sacroiliac joint MRI and the added value of MRI-based synthetic CT for detecting and evaluating these findings. The results showed that incidental findings were more common than sacroiliitis on sacroiliac joint MRI, and more than half of these findings were only visible on synthetic CT.
Purpose: To determine the prevalence of incidental findings on sacroiliac joint MRI and to determine the added value of MRI-based synthetic CT in the detection and evaluation of these incidental findings.Method: In this retrospective study 210 patients clinically suspected of spondyloarthritis who underwent MRI of the sacroiliac joint with synthetic CT sequence were included. The images were reviewed by two radiologists in consensus for the prevalence of sacroiliitis, incidental findings, and the ability of synthetic CT and the conventional MRI to detect and diagnose these findings.Results: In 44.7% of patients sacroiliitis was present. In 89.0% of patients MRI showed at least one incidental finding other than sacroiliitis. Degeneration of the sacroiliac joint was the most prevalent finding (140 patients, 66.6%). The most frequent incidental findings outside the sacroiliac joint were facet joint degeneration (29.0%), disc degeneration (25.2%), enostosis (19.5%) and lumbosacral transitional vertebrae (14.3%). A total of 788 lesions was recorded and synthetic CT was found to be problem solving or necessary for diagnosis in 543 (68.9%) of these lesions. 42.1% of lesions were not visible on conventional MRI (T1 TSE and STIR), most often degenerative osteophytes in the sacroiliac joint or lower lumbar spine.Conclusion: Incidental findings are seen more frequently on sacroiliac joint MRI than sacroiliitis, which is relevant as some will have clinical significance or require treatment. Nearly half of these incidental lesions were only visible on synthetic CT, which additionally has been shown to be problem solving for diagnosis in many other cases.

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