AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess how common variations in the appearance of subchondral bone on T1-weighted MRI might resemble erosions in the sacroiliac joints of children, focusing on differences by age and sex.
  • MRI images of 251 children (mostly aged around 12.4 years) were evaluated by three independent radiologists, who noted features such as visibility, blurring, and irregularity of the cortical black line, with results showing a high prevalence of abnormal features in over 65% of cases.
  • The findings highlight the importance of recognizing normal MRI appearances in pediatric patients to avoid misdiagnosing sacroiliitis, as many children's MRI results contain characteristics commonly associated with erosions

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine prevalence of variations of subchondral bone appearance that may mimic erosions on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of pediatric sacroiliac (SI) joints according to age and sex.

Methods: With ethics committee approval and informed consent, SI joint MRIs of 251 children (132 girls), mean age 12.4 years (range 6.1-18.0 years), were obtained in 2 cohorts: 127 children imaged for nonrheumatic reasons, and 124 children with low back pain but no features of sacroiliitis at initial clinical MRI review. MRIs were reviewed by 3 experienced radiologists, blinded from each other, for 3 features of the cortical black line representing the subchondral bone plate on T1-weighted MRI: visibility, blurring, and irregularity.

Results: Based on agreement from 2 or more readers, the cortical black line was partially absent in 88.4% of the children, blurred in 34.7%, and irregular in 41.4%. All these features were most common on the iliac side of SI joints and at the first sacral vertebra level. Clearly visualized, sharply delineated SI joints with none of these features were seen in only 8.0% of children, or in 35.1% if we conservatively required agreement of all 3 readers to consider a feature present. There was no significant difference between sexes or cohorts; findings were similar across pediatric age groups.

Conclusion: Understanding the normal MRI appearance of the developing SI joint is necessary to distinguish physiologic findings from disease. At least two-thirds (65%) of normal pediatric SI joints showed at least 1 feature that is a component of the adult definition of SI joint erosions, risking overdiagnosis of sacroiliitis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acr.24746DOI Listing

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