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Erschienen in: BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 1/2018

Open Access 01.12.2018 | Research article

A novel MRI- and CT-based scoring system to differentiate malignant from osteoporotic vertebral fractures in Chinese patients

verfasst von: Zi Li, Ming Guan, Dong Sun, Yong Xu, Feng Li, Wei Xiong

Erschienen in: BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | Ausgabe 1/2018

Abstract

Background

Various types of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) findings are used to differentiate malignant vertebral fractures (MVFs) from osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVFs). The distinguishing ability of any single finding is limited. This study developed a novel scoring system that integrates multiple MRI and CT signs for improved accuracy of differential diagnosis between MVFs and OVFs.

Methods

A total of 150 MVFs and 150 OVFs in thoracolumbar vertebrae were analyzed. MRI and CT images were obtained within 2 months of the probable time of fracture. The sensitivity and specificity of 15 MRI and CT image findings were evaluated. A stepwise discriminant analysis using these signs as variables was used to create a scoring system to differentiate MVFs from OVFs.

Results

All 15 image findings had strong specificity and moderate sensitivity. Seven MRI and three CT image findings were selected and assigned integral values in the final scoring system. A total score of 4 or greater points indicated MVF, whereas a total score of 3 or fewer points indicated OVF. The classification accuracy was 98.3% in the test set.

Conclusions

This novel scoring system using MRI and CT radiologic findings to differentiate MVFs from OVFs in Chinese patients was efficient with high accuracy and good applicability.
Hinweise
Zi Li and Ming Guan contributed equally to this work.
Abkürzungen
CT
Computed tomography
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging
MVF
Malignant vertebral fracture
OVF
Osteoporotic vertebral fracture

Background

Vertebral fractures caused by benign or malignant lesions are common among the elderly. Identifying the etiology of spinal fractures at an early stage is critical to determine the clinical course, treatment, and prognosis [14]. Common features of osteoporotic vertebral fracture (OVF) and malignant vertebral fracture (MVF), including age group, clinical symptoms, and history of inadequate trauma, make differential diagnosis challenging. Open biopsy is considered the benchmark to diagnose musculoskeletal lesions, with 98% accuracy [5]. Its clinical application has been limited due to increased morbidity and a significant risk of complications [6, 7]. Percutaneous biopsy, a less invasive option recommended as an alternative for open biopsy, has a wide range of reported accuracy rates from 16 to 92% and a complication rate between 0 and 10% [8].
Modern radiological imaging techniques, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT), have good predictive value for differential diagnosis. Multiple-image findings are utilized to distinguish between MVFs and OVFs [1, 3, 4, 9, 10]. Single-image findings have limited distinguishing ability and are not considered sufficiently sensitive or specific, such as fluid sign and pedicle involvement [1, 11, 12]. Misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis of MVF is not uncommon in clinical practice, potentially due in part to confusing MRI and CT image findings. Unnecessary biopsy and pathological examinations of OVF patients diminishes the medical treatment experience and increases the risk and cost to the patient.
Integrating characteristic image findings can improve the accuracy of differential diagnosis. Discriminant analysis is a generally accepted statistical method that combines multiple features to separate or characterize two or more classes of clinical issues [1315]. Two earlier studies attempted to create a scoring system to distinguish MVFs from OVFs using discriminant analysis, but the etiology types for malignant cases [16] or the sample sizes were limited [17].
This study utilized a large sample of Chinese patients to generate a novel scoring system to differentiate MVFs from OVFs using MRI and CT image findings.

Methods

All OVF and MVF cases contained in the electronic records archives of the department of spine surgery for the period January 2013 to March 2018 were included in the study. Our institutional Ethics Review Board approved the study protocol. Informed and written concent was obtained from all patients. MRI images were obtained using two 3.0 T magnetic resonance scanners (Siemens Healthcare, Skyra, Germany; GE Healthcare, Discovery MR750, USA). Images of 5-mm thick contiguous or vertebral bodies and disc level CT sections were performed using a 16-detector CT scanner (GE Healthcare, LightSpeed 16, USA) and 1.25-3 mm thick reconstruction slices with no overlap were obtained for evaluation. The inclusion and exclusion criteria listed below were used to further refine selection of the sample.

Inclusion criteria

1.
A definitive diagnosis was required for inclusion. Patients included in the group of MVF required an exact pathologic diagnosis for one vertebrae (positive percutaneous transpedicular biopsy or pathological specimen through spinal surgery). OVF diagnosis was verified by benign histologic pathology, or not aggravated or improving clinical symptoms with restoration of vertebral signal intensity on MRI observed for a period of at least 2 months [16].
 
2.
Only thoracolumbar vertebral lesions were included.
 
3.
An MRI or CT was obtained within 2 months of the probable day of fracture.
 

Exclusion criteria

1.
Neurogenic tumor cases, such as schwannoma or neurofibroma.
 
2.
MVF patients who had already received an operation, irradiation, or biopsy.
 
3.
Concomitant cases of OVF and MVF.
 
4.
Severe trauma cases, such as a traffic accident or high falling injury.
 
A total of 150 OVFs and 150 MVFs in 226 Chinese patients were selected. The 300 vertebral fracture images were reviewed by two orthopedic surgeons (Zi Li and Ming Guan each with 2 years of experience) and one musculoskeletal radiologist (Dong Sun with 2 years of experience). A total of 15 key findings (12 MRI and 3 CT) previously proposed in the literature was applied to image evaluation. Discrepancies were resolved by debate until consensus was achieved. The sensitivity and specificity of each finding was then calculated.

MRI finding

Pattern change of vertebrae signal intensity

A lesion is likely malignant when the observed geometric pattern of vertebral signal intensity is round (Fig. 1, F1) [2, 12, 18, 19]. A band-like appearance is often seen in OVF (Fig. 1, F2) [12, 19, 20]. A whole vertebrae diffused with abnormal signal indicates MVF (Fig. 1, F3); OVF is implied if a normal signal remains [11, 12, 19, 21].

Contour of the anterior or posterior wall border

OVF is implied when there is a sharp protrusion in the posterior superior border of the vertebral body (Fig. 1, F4); a smoothly blunt protrusion in the posterior border of the vertebral body is often seen in MVF (Fig. 1, F5) [20, 22]. An anterior vertebral convexity indicates a higher likelihood of MVF than OVF (Fig. 1, F6) [23].

Paravertebral solid mass

A paravertebral solid mass is more commonly detected in MVF than OVF (Fig. 1, F7). Spinal tumors are usually solid masses rather than cystic masses which are commonly detected in infectious cases, especially in the spinal tuberculosis [11, 18, 24].

Cleft formation (“fluid sign”)

Fluid sign refers to a cleft configuration with a signal as low as that of water in T1WI and as high as that of water in T2WI (Fig. 1, F9) [2, 12, 19, 23, 24]. It supports a diagnosis of OVF rather than MVF.

Asymmetry of signal intensity change in axial image

The symmetry of the signal intensity change in vertebrae indicates OVF, whereas asymmetry of the signal intensity change indicates MVF (Fig. 1, F10) [18].

Pedicle involvement

A signal intensity change encompassing half of the pedicle is judged as pedicle involvement and indicates MVF (Fig. 1, F11) [12, 19, 20].

Pattern of posterior wall protrusion in axial image

The normal pattern of posterior wall protrusion in OVF is single-peaked (Fig. 1, F12). The pattern of posterior wall protrusion in MVF is usually double-peaked (Fig. 1, F13) [18].

CT imaging finding

Sclerotic band beneath the end plate

The sclerotic band refers to a zone of trabeculae compaction and late reactive callus that has a high density in CT after osteoporotic fractures, usually accompanied by a deformed end plate (Fig. 1, F8) [19, 25].

Relationship between fracture and osteolysis

An apparent vertebral fracture line without osteolysis, with no tumor cells invading, is often seen in OVF (Fig. 1, F14). The osteolytic destruction of the vertebral cortex or body is observed in 97% of MVF cases (Fig. 1, F15) [18, 19, 25].
After image evaluation, a stepwise discriminant analysis was used to produce the scoring system. Discriminant analysis is a generalized statistical method that generates a suitable combination of features that separate or characterize two or more classes of objects [26]. Each image finding was considered a dummy variable, and multiple linear regression analysis was implemented with corresponding discriminant coefficients as scores, and constants as discriminant threshold. The stepwise method selects the “best” variables automatically in the analysis when comparing many variables. Starting with a situation that does not include any variables, the variable with the largest F to Enter value greater than the entry criteria (set by default as 3.84) is included in the analysis at each step. The variables with F to Enter values < 3.84 are left out of the analysis until no more are added. The error rate of discrimination is calculated by the leave-one-out cross validation method: any sample is regarded as a test case and the remaining samples are regarded as a training set, detecting on the cycle until all samples have become test cases once. A novel scoring formula was obtained, with corresponding coefficients of selected predictors as scores and the discriminant threshold as a constant. All data were statistically analyzed using IBM SPSS version 19. Single parameters were analyzed using chi-square tests. A value of p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

The MVF group had a younger mean age and lower proportion of females than the OVF group. The most common metastasis and primary neoplasms were lung cancer (35 cases) and multiple myeloma (21 cases), respectively. The clinical characteristics of the included cases are presented in Table 1. The calculated sensitivity and specificity of the 15 image findings included in the analysis are presented in Table 2.
Table 1
Clinical characteristics
Characteristics
MVF
OVF
n (vertebrae)
150
150
n (patients)
106
126
Gender (Male/Female)
74/32
34/92
Age (years), Mean ± SD (range)
55.5 ± 11.9 (23–75)
66.3 ± 7.6 (51–82)
Spinal level
 Thoracic, n (%)
70 (46.7%)
69 (46.0%)
 Lumbar, n (%)
80 (53.3%)
81 (54.0%)
n (tumor type)
 
N/A
 Lung
35
 
 Multiple myeloma
21
 
 Prostate
13
 
 Bladder
11
 
 Liver
9
 
 Kidney
8
 
 Lymphoma
7
 
 Breast
4
 
 Leukemia
4
 
 Osteosarcoma
3
 
 PNET
3
 
 Chondrosarcoma
2
 
 Other
30
 
MVF metastatic vertebral fracture, OVF osteoporotic vertebral fracture, PNET peripheral neuroectodermal tumor, N/A not applicable
Table 2
Sensitivity and specificity of key MRI and CT findings
Radiological Findings
Implication
Sensitivity (%)
Specificity (%)
p-value
MRI findings
 Pattern change of vertebrae signal intensity
  Round
MVF
43
99
< 0.001
  Band like
OVF
58
97
< 0.001
  Diffuse
MVF
79
91
< 0.001
 Shape of posterior wall protrusion
  Superior sharp
OVF
43
87
< 0.001
  Smoothly blunt
MVF
57
96
< 0.001
 Anterior vertebral convexity
MVF
23
97
< 0.001
 Paravertebral solid mass
MVF
63
99
< 0.001
 Fluid sign
OVF
29
99
< 0.001
 Asymmetry of signal intensity change
MVF
80
87
< 0.001
 Pedicle involvement
MVF
86
79
< 0.001
 Shape of posterior wall protrusion
  Single peaked
OVF
26
88
< 0.05
  Double peaked
MVF
35
97
< 0.001
CT findings
 Sclerotic band beneath the end plate
OVF
65
99
< 0.001
 Fracture without osteolysis
OVF
59
99
< 0.001
 Osteolytic destruction
MVF
63
98
< 0.001
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, MVF malignant vertebral fracture, OVF osteoporotic vertebral fracture

Discriminant analysis

The 15 image findings listed in Table 2 were set as independent variables. A variable present in one vertebra was set as 1; if it was not present, the value was set as 0. Stepwise discriminant analysis was then performed. A total of ten selected findings with the corresponding coefficients and the constant in the result are presented in Table 3; the remaining five findings were excluded because of low tolerance. The classification accuracy of the stepwise discriminant analysis was 98.3%, Wilks’ λ was 0.158 (p < 0.001), and the discriminant accuracy of the cross-validation (leave-one-out method) was 97.7%.
Table 3
Result of the discriminant analysis
Radiological Findings
Discriminant coefficient
MRI findings
 Pattern change of vertebrae signal intensity
  Round
3.794
  Band like
−1.730
  Diffuse
4.238
 Smoothly blunt border protrusion of the posterior wall
1.909
 Paravertebral solid mass
4.250
 Asymmetry of signal intensity change
4.559
 Pedicle involvement
4.330
CT findings
 Sclerotic band beneath the end plate
−3.467
 Fracture without osteolysis
−3.786
 Osteolytic destruction
3.051
Discriminant threshold
7.272
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, MVF malignant vertebral fracture, OVF osteoporotic vertebral fracture
Decimal scores are not practical in clinical settings. To enhance practicability, we divided the constant and coefficients term by two and the results were rounded into integral numbers. Finally, a simplified scoring system was created (Table 4). A total score ≥ 4 indicates MVF, whereas a total score ≤ 3 points indicates OVF. The classification accuracy of the simplified scoring system was 98.3%, equal to the original discriminant analysis. Only three OVF and two MVF cases were incorrectly classified by the simplified scoring system.
Table 4
Modified scoring system for diagnosis of malignant vertebral fractures (MVFs)
Radiological Findings
Implication
Score
MRI findings
 Pattern change of vertebrae signal intensity
  Round
MVF
2
  Band-like
OVF
−1
  Diffuse
MVF
2
 Smoothly blunt border protrusion of the posterior wall
MVF
1
 Paravertebral solid mass
MVF
2
 Asymmetry of signal intensity change
MVF
2
 Pedicle involvement
MVF
2
CT findings
 Sclerotic band beneath the end plate
OVF
−2
 Fracture without osteolysis
OVF
−2
 Osteolytic destruction
MVF
2
Total score: OVF ≤ 3 and MVF ≥ 4
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, MVF malignant vertebral fracture, OVF osteoporotic vertebral fracture

Discussion

A stepwise discriminant analysis was used to create a novel simple scoring system to differentiate MVF from OVF using MRI and CT image findings, with a discriminant accuracy of 98.3%.
Relatively low sensitivity and high specificity were calculated for image findings. The distinguishing ability of any single radiological finding was limited. The rational application of discriminant analysis to integrate different image findings was a statistically valid and logical method to maximize the diagnostic accuracy rate. A total of 15 significant image findings were included as variables in the study based on previous research. Analysis of the input variable contribution to the output eliminated five findings, and the rational model was established. Only two previous studies have attempted to develop scoring systems to differentiate benign and malignant vertebral fractures using discriminant analysis [16, 17]. The score scale of the study from Yuzawa et al. was also based on MRI and CT signs, but had a limited sample size (100 cases), and radiologic findings yielded relatively low accuracy rates [17]. This study included four involved findings (pedicle involvement, paravertebral solid mass, fracture without osteolysis, and osteolytic destruction) not included in previous scoring systems.
The discriminant accuracy based on MRI or CT findings alone were 96.0 and 89.7%, respectively. These are slightly lower than the MRI findings accuracy of 96.6% reported by So Koto et al., who concluded that using MRI findings alone provides satisfactory accuracy for differential diagnosis [16]. Including findings, image judging criteria, sample size, and ethnicity may account for the different accuracy rates. To improve accuracy, this study included CT image findings in the analysis. CT is the most suitable imaging technique to identify calcification, ossification, extent of lesion, and cortical outline with high spatial resolution [24]. The affordability and speed of CT scanning have made it a general imaging service in China. Supplementing MRI findings with CT are indispensable for differential diagnosis.
The sclerotic band beneath the end plate was an important finding in the scoring system. A faint band of sclerosis beneath the end plate refers to a zone of trabeculae compaction and late reactive callus, which has high density in CT after osteoporotic fracture and may be present for 8 to 10 weeks post-fracture [19]. Reactive sclerotic change was observed with 77.8% sensitivity and 90.0% specificity, indicating that sclerotic change on CT images was a statistically significant finding indicating benign lesion [25]. The discriminant accuracy decreased to 97.3% without the sclerotic band beneath the end plate, verifying the importance of the finding.
A total of 300 cases were included in this study, larger than any other sample in the literature. The tumor etiology was primarily primary and metastatic tumors. Pathological examination is considered the benchmark for tumor diagnosis, and all patients of MVF included in this study had exact pathologic diagnoses of one vertebrae (positive percutaneous transpedicular biopsy or pathological specimen through spinal surgery). In the study from Kato et al., metastatic tumor cases were diagnosed either by pathologic diagnosis or malignancy radiographic changes, which are less rigorous than the criteria used in this study [16].
Combining 15 MRI and CT findings based on the available literature, and selecting 10 variables for the scoring system, yielded a system with discriminant accuracy higher than that achieved in previous studies.
There are several limitations to this study. Firstly, although CT findings can improve the discriminant accuracy for differentiating MVFs from OVFs, the hazards of radiation ionization would not be ignored. Secondly, there were many multiple malignant vertebral fractures in the available cases. Single vertebral involvement is the best operation indication for en bloc resection in malignant vertebral fractures [27]. One of the original objectives for this study was to contribute to the surgical decision for single vertebral pathologic fractures. Due to the limited sample size, vertebrae were used as the sample unit for assessment rather than patients. A multi-center approach to compile more cases of single pathological vertebral fracture can be used address this issue in the future. Additionally, clinical information including symptoms and tumor markers can assist clinicians with diagnoses and may be added to a future scoring system.

Conclusion

A novel scoring system based on MRI and CT image findings in Chinese patients was effective and convenient for differentiating MVFs from OVFs. A future multi-center validation is required to confirm the accuracy and practicability of the scoring system.

Acknowledgements

We thank all the patients involved in the study.

Funding

This work is supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81571816).

Availability of data and materials

The datasets supporting the conclusions of this article are included within the article. If you wish to obtain access for the underlying material please contact the corresponding author to discuss your request in detail.
Ethics Review Board of Tongji Hospital of Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology approved the study protocol. Informed and written concent was obtained from all patients.
Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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Metadaten
Titel
A novel MRI- and CT-based scoring system to differentiate malignant from osteoporotic vertebral fractures in Chinese patients
verfasst von
Zi Li
Ming Guan
Dong Sun
Yong Xu
Feng Li
Wei Xiong
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2018
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders / Ausgabe 1/2018
Elektronische ISSN: 1471-2474
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-018-2331-0

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