The Cochlea in Branchio-Oto-Renal Syndrome: An Objective Method for the Diagnosis of Offset Cochlear Turns.

AJNR Am J Neuroradiol

Department of Radiology (C.D.R.), Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

Published: November 2022

Background And Purpose: An "unwound" or "offset" cochlea has been described as a characteristic imaging feature in patients with branchio-oto-renal syndrome, and recently recognized to be associated in particular to those with gene mutations. Determination of this feature has traditionally relied on subjective visual assessment. Our aim was to establish an objective assessment method for cochlear offset (the cochlear turn alignment ratio) and determine an optimal cutoff turn alignment ratio value that separates individuals with -branchio-oto-renal syndrome from those with -branchio-oto-renal syndrome and healthy controls.

Materials And Methods: Temporal bone CT or MR imaging from 40 individuals with branchio-oto-renal syndrome and 40 controls was retrospectively reviewed. Cochlear offset was determined visually by 2 independent blinded readers and then quantitatively via a standardized technique yielding the cochlear turn alignment ratio. The turn alignment ratio values were compared between cochleae qualitatively assessed as "not offset" and "offset." Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to determine the ability of the turn alignment ratio to differentiate between these populations and an optimal cutoff turn alignment ratio value. Cochlear offset and turn alignment ratio values were analyzed for each branchio-oto-renal syndrome genotype subpopulation and for controls.

Results: The turn alignment ratio can accurately differentiate between cochleae with and without an offset (< .001). The optimal cutoff value separating these populations was 0.476 (sensitivity = 1, specificity = 0.986, = 0.986). All except 1 cochlea among the -branchio-oto-renal syndrome subset and all with unknown genotype branchio-oto-renal syndrome had a cochlear offset and a turn alignment ratio of <0.476. All except 1 cochlea among the -branchio-oto-renal syndrome subset and all controls had no offset and a turn alignment ratio of >0.476.

Conclusions: There is a statistically significant difference in turn alignment ratios between offset and nonoffset cochleae, with an optimal cutoff of 0.476. This cutoff value allows excellent separation of -branchio-oto-renal syndrome from -branchio-oto-renal syndrome and from individuals without branchio-oto-renal syndrome or sensorineural hearing loss. The turn alignment ratio is a reliable and objective metric that can aid in the imaging evaluation of branchio-oto-renal syndrome.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9731253PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A7653DOI Listing

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