| Literature DB >> 29987447 |
Katharine E Orr1,2, Savvas Andronikou3, Marc James Bramham3,4, Izidora Holjar-Erlic3, Flavia Menegotto3, Athimalaipet V Ramanan5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinicians increasingly rely on imaging in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) to identify sacroiliitis and guide treatment. However, there is limited evidence about magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for sacroiliitis in children, and interobserver reliability is variable.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Interobserver variability; Magnetic resonance imaging; Sacroiliac joint; Sacroiliitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29987447 PMCID: PMC6153879 DOI: 10.1007/s00247-018-4185-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Radiol ISSN: 0301-0449
Fig. 1A 15-year-old girl with reactive arthritis and clinical sacroiliitis. a-b Coronal oblique short tau inversion recovery (STIR) spin echo (TR 4,000 ms, TE 36 ms) (a) and T1-weighted spin echo (TR 679 ms, TE 12 ms) (b) images demonstrate oedema on the iliac side of the inferior left sacroiliac joint (arrows), seen as high signal in (a) STIR and low signal in (b). c-d Coronal oblique STIR spin echo (c) and T1-weighted spin echo (d) images at a different location show broad-based erosions (arrows) more superiorly on the iliac side of the left sacroiliac joint, better appreciated in (d)
Fig. 2A 17-year-old boy with juvenile spondyloarthritis. a-b Coronal oblique short tau inversion recovery (STIR) spin echo (TR 4,000 ms, TE 36 ms) (a) and T1-weighted spin echo (TR 679 ms, TE 12 ms) (b) images at slightly different locations in the joint demonstrate multiple erosions on the iliac side of the right sacroiliac joint (curved arrows) with surrounding oedema (straight arrows), which is high signal on (a) and low signal on (b)
Fig. 3A 9-year-old girl with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and suspected sacroiliitis. a Coronal oblique short tau inversion recovery (STIR) spin echo (TR 4,000 ms, TE 36 ms) image demonstrates a left sacroiliac joint effusion, seen as high signal within the joint (straight arrows) and subchondral sclerosis (curved arrows). b T1-weighted spin echo (TR 679 ms, TE 12 ms) images also demonstrate sclerosis adjacent to the left sacroiliac joint, particularly on the iliac side of the joint (curved arrows)
Fig. 4A 12-year-old girl with mechanical back pain. a Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image (TR 679 ms, TE 12 ms) demonstrates smooth synovial enhancement (arrows) of both sacroiliac joints in the absence of other findings. The authors believe this may be a normal finding
Frequency (percentage of all 99 scans) of magnetic resonance imaging findings according to the panel (reader 1) and compared with the independent readers 2 and 3
| Reader 1 (panel of 3 radiologists) | Reader 2 | Reader 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Final diagnosis of sacroiliitis | 12 (12%) | 19 (19%) | 39 (39%) |
| Bone marrow oedema | 8 (8%) | 19 (19%) | 39 (39%) |
| Effusion | 4 (4%) | 2 (2%) | 43 (43%) |
| Diffusion-weighted signal abnormality | 5 (5%) | 11 (11%) | 11 (11%) |
| Enhancement | 5 (5%) | 15 (15%) | 21 (21%) |
| Erosion | 8 (8%) | 7 (7%) | 31 (31%) |
| Sclerosis | 6 (6%) | 1 (1%) | 9 (9%) |
Interobserver Cohen kappa and proportion of agreement for overall diagnosis of sacroiliitis and for individual sign of sacroiliitis
| Reader 1 (panel) and reader 2 | Reader 1 (panel) and reader 3 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage agreement | Cohen κ | 95% confidence interval | Percentage agreement | Cohen κ | 95% confidence interval | |
| Sacroiliitis | 87% | 0.51 | 0.27–0.72 | 72% | 0.31 | 0.15–0.48 |
| Bone marrow oedema | 85% | 0.38 | 0.12–0.61 | 75% | 0.29 | 0.12–0.45 |
| Erosion | 93% | 0.5 | 0.12–0.79 | 82% | 0.33 | 0.14–0.51 |
| Effusion | 96% | 0.32 | N/A | 60% | 0.06 | −0.02-0.16 |
| Diffusion-weighted signal abnormality | 88% | 0.2 | −0.06–0.50 | 90% | 0.33 | −0.02–0.62 |
| Enhancement | 86% | 0.3 | 0.01–0.56 | 82% | 0.28 | 0.05–0.51 |
| Sclerosis | 94% | 0.24 | 0.00–0.58 | 88% | 0.19 | −0.08–0.48 |
Definitions of magnetic resonance imaging findings
| Bone marrow oedema | Regions of periarticular/subchondral high T2-weighted and low T1-weighted signal. |
| Effusion | Fluid or high T2-weighted signal within the sacroiliac joint. |
| Diffusion-weighted imaging abnormality | High signal on diffusion-weighted images with corresponding high apparent diffusion coefficient either at sites of bone marrow oedema or effusion. |
| Enhancement | Enhancement of the subchondral regions was defined as osteitis. Enhancement of the synovium was defined as synovitis. |
| Erosion | Low T1-weighted signal in subchondral regions with either corresponding low or high T2-weighted signal (depending on the presence of active inflammation); irregular indentations of the articular surface at the synovial part of the joint. |
| Sclerosis | Low T1- and T2-weighted signal bands in the periarticular regions. |
| Ankylosis | Periarticular low signal on all sequences with blurring/disappearance of the joint margins. |