How to Use Imaging in Clinical Practice

Summary

Conventional radiography has long been used to track changes and diagnose rheumatoid arthritis (RA), ankylosing spondylitis, and osteoarthritis. Though still valuable, conventional radiography cannot detect soft tissue changes or early RA bone damage. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasonography (US) allow direct visualization of early inflammatory changes in the joint. MRI measurements/scores for erosion, bone edema, and synovitis have been developed for the hand, wrist, and foot.

  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • inflammatory disorders
  • arthritis
  • magnetic resonance imaging

Conventional radiography has long been used to track changes and diagnose RA, AS, and OA. Though still valuable, conventional radiography cannot detect soft tissue changes or early RA bone damage. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasonography (US) allow direct visualization of early inflammatory changes in the joint. MRI measurements/scores for erosion, bone edema, and synovitis have been developed for the hand, wrist, and foot. Prof. Mikkel Østergaard, Copenhagen University Hospitals at Herlev and Hvvidovre, Denmark, discussed the advantages of using MRI and US for the diagnosis and follow-up of RA and other inflammatory diseases, delineating the following clinical situations where using MRI or US would be beneficial: suspected inflammatory joint disease to determine the presence or absence of synovitis, erosions, etc; clinically difficult RA, for prognostication and establishing baseline values in early RA (MRI only); and to guide aspirations and injections of joints, bursae or tendon sheaths (US only).

MRI discriminates better than x-ray between efficient and inefficient therapy, as well as baseline erosive progression. In clinical studies, baseline MRI findings predicted unilateral wrist and metacarpophalangeal joint erosions after 12 weeks versus 24 weeks with radiography. It is also possible to improve diagnoses of sacroiliitis accompanying AS using MRI versus radiography. MRI reveals early cartilage changes and bone marrow edema associated with AS and picks up an additional 75% of early cases not diagnosed by radiography.

Prof. Østergaard concluded by saying “MRI could be a useful element in future diagnostic criteria in early RA. High baseline combined scores of wrist joint MRI erosions and synovitis was the best predictor (OR 3.59) of severe radiological erosive progression 10 years later.” (Ann Rheum Dis. 2005;64:1280–7; 64 Suppl 1:123–47; J Rheum 1996;23:2107–15; Skeletal Radiol 1998;27:311–20; Arthritis Rheum. 2004;50:2622–32).

The main extraspinal manifestations of AS, peripheral enthesitis and arthritis, are usually diagnosed clinically, but ultrasound and MRI may be helpful. Dr. Xenophaon Baraliakos, Rheumazentrum Ruhrgebiet, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany, stated that “despite limitations, scintigraphy of the sacroiliac joint (SIJ) is a useful screening method for detecting bony or entheseal inflammation.” The overall sensitivity for the detection of active sacroiliitis is 95% to 100% for MRI, 48% to 71% for scintigraphy, and 19% to 33% for conventional radiography. Conventional radiography is still the most common method employed for the diagnosis of AS, as well as AS related structural spinal changes, such as syndesmophytes and ankylosis. Dr. Baraliakos presented data showing that examination of the spine with MRI is useful in assessing inflammatory changes or for diagnosis of early and active stages of the disease. MRI sequences useful for assessing active disease are the STIR (short tau inversion recovery), the T2-fat saturated, and the T1 post-adolinium MRI sequence. The thoracic spine is the most commonly affected area in AS. For assessment of structural changes in this area, the T1-weighted MRI sequence is used (Ann Rheum Dis. 2005;64:1462–6; 2004;63:1046–55; Arthritis Rheum. 2005;52:1756–65; 52(4):1216–23; Magn Reson Imaging. 1999; 42:695–703).

Dr. Philip Lang, Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA, believes MRI has the potential to detect signal and morphological changes in the cartilage associated with OA if used with targeted visual scoring methods and targeted quantitative techniques. “By using a scoring system designed to capture entire spectrums of cartilage disease, not only late disease, scoring subsegments within each compartment, and using a focal assessment targeted to the disease area, we can maximize the scoring system sensitivity to change.” said Dr Lang. (Arthritis Rheum. 2002;46:2065–72).

Prof. Philip Conaghan, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK, and Prof. Desiree Van der Heijde of the University Hospital Maastricht, Netherlands, session Co-Chairs, closed by expressing the opinion that diagnosis and management of inflammatory disease is going through exciting changes, in part due to the advances in diagnostic and imaging techniques.

View Summary