| Literature DB >> 25896163 |
Anthony Traboulsee1, Laurent Létourneau-Guillon2, Mark Steven Freedman3, Paul W O'Connor4, Aditya Bharatha5, Santanu Chakraborty6, J Marc Girard7, Fabrizio Giuliani8, John T Lysack9, James J Marriott10, Luanne M Metz11, Sarah A Morrow12, Jiwon Oh13, Manas Sharma14, Robert A Vandorpe15, Talia Alexandra Vertinsky16, Vikram S Wadhwa17, Sarah von Riedemann18, David K B Li19.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A definitive diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS), as distinct from a clinically isolated syndrome, requires one of two conditions: a second clinical attack or particular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings as defined by the McDonald criteria. MRI is also important after a diagnosis is made as a means of monitoring subclinical disease activity. While a standardized protocol for diagnostic and follow-up MRI has been developed by the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centres, acceptance and implementation in Canada have been suboptimal.Entities:
Keywords: neuroimaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25896163 PMCID: PMC4416356 DOI: 10.1017/cjn.2015.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Neurol Sci ISSN: 0317-1671 Impact factor: 2.104
Summary of 2010 McDonald criteria
| Clinical presentation | Additional MRI data needed for MS diagnosis |
|---|---|
| Two or more attacks; objective clinical evidence of two or more lesions or objective clinical evidence of one lesion with reasonable historical evidence of a prior attack | None, but strongly recommended to have a brain MRI with supportive features |
| Two or more attacks; objective clinical evidence of one lesion |
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| One attack (clinically isolated syndrome, CIS); objective clinical evidence of two or more lesions |
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| One attack (CIS); objective clinical evidence of one lesion | DIS and DIT as described previously |
Adapted from Polman et al, 2011.
Consensus statements of the CAN-MRI-MS panel regarding MRI use in MS diagnosis and management
| Consensus statement | |
|---|---|
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| The CAN-MRI-MS Panel unanimously endorses the use of the McDonald 2010 criteria for the diagnosis of MS. |
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| The subcallosal plane is essential for the prescription of all axial sequences and a standardized core MRI sequence that allows for comparison of studies over time and across centres. |
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| Gadolinium imaging is useful for diagnosis of CIS and management of MS. |
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| The appropriate wait time for a diagnostic brain MRI for patients with new typical CIS is 1 week. In some clinical settings an MRI scan is required immediately. |
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| Patients with established relapsing–remitting MS should have, at minimum, a follow-up brain MRI:∙At 6 to 12 months after treatment switch ∙Annually while on disease-modifying treatment∙When there is unexpected clinical deterioration. |
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| The referring physician should include on the brain MRI requisition the following key clinical information:∙Purpose of the scan (diagnosis or follow-up of MS)∙Clinical scenario (definite CIS [syndrome and probable location] and date of CIS)∙If not classic CIS/MS, then clinical suspicion (likely or unlikely MS) and duration of symptoms∙Need for gadolinium and reason for request |
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| The radiology report should include:∙Descriptive elements (e.g. number and location of lesions, enhancing lesions, new lesions)∙Interpretation that can be used to support the clinical picture |
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| The CAN-MRI-MS Panel unanimously recommends that:∙Copies of brain MRI studies be retained permanently and be available to the patient’s health care team∙Patients be encouraged to keep their own scans on portable digital media |
CIS: clinically isolated syndrome; MS: multiple sclerosis.
Figure 1Sagittal midline localizer scan showing the subcallosal plane.
Highlights of the CMSC-standardized protocol for brain MRI in CIS/MS
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| ∙Axial sequences oriented along the subcallosal plane ( |
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| ∙Axial FLAIR:∘3-mm contiguous slices, acquired directly from a two-dimensional acquisition or from isotropic three-dimensional series∘4- to 5-mm slices with a maximum of 1-mm gap are also acceptable (although less optimal) |
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| ∙Can be performed according to the CMSC guidelines or be specific to individual centres∙May include:∘Sagittal (FLAIR, PD, or T2)∘Axial T2∘Axial T1 (pre- and postcontrast)∙Optional:∘3D T1∘DWI |
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| ∙Useful in certain clinical situations, but not always required (see Consensus Statement #3) |
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| ∙Scans must be of good quality, with adequate SNR and spatial resolution (in plane 1 mm×1 mm) |
CIS: clinically isolated syndrome; CMSC: Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centres; DWI: diffusion-weighted imaging; FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; PD: proton-density–weighted; SNR: signal-to-noise ratio.
Consensus guidance on appropriate use of gadolinium in patients with CIS and MS
| Use of gadolinium | Clinical situations | |
|---|---|---|
| CIS | MS | |
| Gadolinium enhancement is | ∙Atypical clinical presentation or unusual brain MRI features | ∙Pretreatment for high-risk drug (e.g. mitoxantrone)∙Monitoring safety and/or failure on high-risk drug∙When required to meet treatment eligibility criteria∙When knowledge about recent ongoing disease activity is needed for management∙If unable to compare serial scans for new T2 lesions because of technical differences |
| Gadolinium enhancement is | Provided that there are two or more white matter lesions present on brain imaging, enhancement should be considered:∙When there is potential for early diagnosis on a single scan∙When the results might affect treatment decisions∙When the results might affect patient counselling | ∙Detecting new clinically silent disease activity in RRMS patients on DMT or considering starting DMT∙Establishing new baseline in natalizumab patients switching to another DMT (see Statement #5) |
CIS: clinically isolated syndrome; DMT: disease-modifying therapy; MS: multiple sclerosis; RRMS: relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis.
Radiologists’ recommendations for an effective MRI requisition
| What to write | What |
|---|---|
| ∙Purpose of the scan: Diagnosis or follow-up | ∙“Query MS” or “rule out MS” without further clinical context |
| ∙Clinical scenario:∘Diagnostic:▪For definite CIS, describe the syndrome (e.g. optic neuritis, transverse myelitis) and probable location, date of onset▪If not classic, then describe clinical suspicion (likely or unlikely MS) and duration of symptoms∘RRMS follow-up:▪State reason for follow-up (e.g. treatment monitoring, active inflammatory disease or unexpected deterioration, PML surveillance)▪May be useful to outline patient’s treatment history if purpose of MRI is to assess treatment response | |
| ∙Whether or not gadolinium is required, and, if so, the clinical reason | ∙Request for gadolinium without clinical rationale |
| ∙Any special or optional sequences requested and the clinical rationale | ∙Standard sequences—already specified by CMSC or local protocol |
| ∙Whether or not spinal cord imaging is required | |
| ∙Date, location, and any relevant results from previous imaging |
CIS: clinically isolated syndrome; CMSC: Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centres; MS: multiple sclerosis; PML: progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy.
Neurologists’ recommendations for an effective MRI report
| What to include | What |
|---|---|
| ∙Descriptive elements:∘Number of lesions (e.g. 0-10, >10, numerous)∘Location (e.g. juxtacortical, subcortical/deep, periventricular, infratentorial)∘Comment on whether lesions are typical of demyelination∘Number and location of enhancing lesions∘Number and location of definite new (≥3 mm) and/or enlarging lesions compared to previous study∘Pattern of lesions∘Presence and appearance of any spinal cord lesions∘Comment on whether scan meets DIS or DIT criteria (if requested) | ∙Focus on irrelevant or incidental findings∙Vague descriptions (e.g. “changes consistent with demyelination”) without further details |
| ∙Interpretation:∘Preferred wording is “lesions typical of” or “suggestive of” MS∘Commentary welcomed on whether lesion pattern is suggestive of active disease∘Useful to compare/contrast with earlier scans if available∘Should report any findings that are | ∙“Lesions diagnostic of MS”∙“McDonald MS criteria met” |
| ∙Reinforcement of the need for clinical information to support MRI findings in diagnosis | ∙A diagnosis based on MRI findings alone |
DIS: dissemination in space; DIT: dissemination in time; MS: multiple sclerosis.