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Original Research |
1 Department of Radiology, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA.
2 Present address: Department of Radiology, Klinikum Augsburg, Stenglinstr. 2,
86156 Augsburg, Germany.
3 Clinical Epidemiology Research and Training Unit, Boston University School of
Medicine, Boston, MA.
4 Division of Research, New England Baptist Hospital, Boston, MA.
OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this study was to compare synovitis-like signal changes in Hoffa's fat pad on unenhanced proton density–weighted fat-suppressed sequences with signal alterations in Hoffa's fat pad and peripatellar synovial thickening on T1-weighted fat-suppressed contrast-enhanced sequences in patients with osteoarthritis.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS. Fifty patients with osteoarthritis of the knee participated in the study. MRI was performed with triplanar proton density–weighted fat-suppressed sequences and a sagittal T1-weighted fat-suppressed contrast-enhanced sequence. Signal intensity alterations in Hoffa's fat pad were scored semiquantitatively on unenhanced and contrast-enhanced images by two radiologists in consensus. Peripatellar synovial thickness was measured on the T1-weighted fat-suppressed contrast-enhanced images in six locations. Agreement between scoring of signal changes on unenhanced and contrast-enhanced sequences was assessed with kappa statistics. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of scoring of signal-intensity changes on unenhanced images were calculated with T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI as the reference standard. In addition, we also examined the relation between signal changes and summed synovial thickness using Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.
RESULTS. Agreement between unenhanced and contrast-enhanced MRI was
fair to moderate (weighted
= 0.35 and 0.45). The sensitivity of signal
intensity changes in Hoffa's fat pad on proton density–weighted
fat-suppressed images was high, but specificity was low. Correlations of
signal intensity changes in Hoffa's fat pad with synovial thickness were lower
for unenhanced scans but all were statistically significant.
CONCLUSION. Signal intensity alterations in Hoffa's fat pad on unenhanced images do not always represent synovitis but are a nonspecific albeit sensitive finding. Semiquantitative scoring of synovitis of the patellofemoral region in osteoarthritis ideally should be performed with T1-weighted contrast-enhanced sequences and should include scoring of synovial thickness.
Keywords: gadolinium knee MRI osteoarthritis scoring synovitis
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