Pediatric whole-body magnetic resonance imaging: comparison of STIR and T2 Dixon sequences in the detection and grading of high signal bone marrow changes
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30029Date
2023-01-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Zadig, Pia Karin Karlsen; von Brandis, Elisabeth; Müller, Lil-Sofie Ording; Tanturri De Horatio, Laura; Rosendahl, Karen; Avenarius, Derk Frederik MatthausAbstract
Methods Prospective study, including whole-body 1.5-T MRIs from 77 healthy children. Two experienced radiologists in consensus identifed and graded areas of high bone marrow signal on STIR and T2-weighted (T2W) turbo spin echo (TSE) Dixon images (presence, extension) in two diferent sessions at an interval of at least 3 weeks. In a third session, a third observer joined the two readers for an additional consensus reading with all sequences available (substitute gold standard).
Results Four hundred ninety of 545 (89.9%) high signal areas were visible on both sequences, while 27 (5.0%) were visible on STIR only and 28 (5.1%) on T2W Dixon only. Twenty-four of 27 (89%) lesions seen on STIR only, and 25/28 (89%) seen on T2W Dixon only, were graded as mildly increased signal intensity. The proportion of true positive high signal lesions was higher for the T2W Dixon images as compared to STIR (74.2% vs. 68.2%) (p=0.029), while the proportion of false negatives was lower (25.9% vs. 31.7% (p=0.035) for T2W Dixon and STIR, respectively). There was a moderate agreement between the T2W Dixon and STIR-based extension scores on a 0–4 scale, with a kappa of 0.45 (95% CI=0.34–0.56).
Conclusions Most high signal bone marrow changes identifed on a 1.5-T whole-body MRI were seen on both STIR and water-only T2W Dixon, underscoring the importance of using identical protocols when following bone-marrow signal changes over time.