4.6 Article

Does the dGEMRIC Index Recover 3 Years After Surgical FAI Correction and an Initial dGEMRIC Decrease at 1-Year Follow-up? A Controlled Prospective Study

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 51, Issue 7, Pages 1808-1817

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/03635465231167854

Keywords

hip; femoroacetabular impingement; dGEMRIC; MRI

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This study longitudinally evaluated dGEMRIC indices in patients who underwent FAI correction and in a control group. The results showed that after 3 years, the dGEMRIC indices improved compared with the short-term 1-year follow-up. This improvement may be attributed to normalized joint biomechanics or regressive postoperative activation of the inflammatory cascade.
Background: Delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of cartilage (dGEMRIC) allows objective and noninvasive assessment of cartilage quality. An interim analysis 1 year after correction of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) previously showed that the dGEMRIC index decreased despite good clinical outcome. Purpose: To evaluate dGEMRIC indices longitudinally in patients who underwent FAI correction and in a control group undergoing nonoperative treatment for FAI. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: This prospective, comparative longitudinal study included 39 patients (40 hips) who received either operative (n = 20 hips) or nonoperative (n = 20 hips) treatment. Baseline demographic characteristics and presence of osseous deformities did not differ between groups. All patients received indirect magnetic resonance arthrography at 3 time points (baseline, 1 and 3 years of follow-up). The 3-dimensional cartilage models were created using a custom-developed deep learning-based software. The dGEMRIC indices were determined separately for acetabular and femoral cartilage. A mixed-effects model was used for statistical analysis in repeated measures. Results: The operative group showed an initial (preoperative to 1-year follow-up) decrease of dGEMRIC indices: acetabular from 512 +/- 174 to 392 +/- 123 ms and femoral from 530 +/- 173 to 411 +/- 117 ms (both P < .001). From 1-year to 3-year follow-up, dGEMRIC indices improved again: acetabular from 392 +/- 123 to 456 +/- 163 ms and femoral from 411 +/- 117 to 477 +/- 169 ms (both P < .001). The nonoperative group showed no significant changes in dGEMRIC indices in acetabular and femoral cartilage from baseline to either follow-up point (all P > .05). Conclusion: This study showed that 3 years after FAI correction, the dGEMRIC indices improved compared with short-term 1-year follow-up. This may be due to normalized joint biomechanics or regressive postoperative activation of the inflammatory cascade after intra-articular surgery.

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