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Erschienen in: Pediatric Radiology 6/2019

21.03.2019 | Original Article

Diagnostic accuracy of non-contrast magnetic resonance enterography in detecting active bowel inflammation in pediatric patients with diagnosed or suspected inflammatory bowel disease to determine necessity of gadolinium-based contrast agents

verfasst von: Stacy J. Kim, Thomas L. Ratchford, Paula M. Buchanan, Dhiren R. Patel, Ting Y. Tao, Jeffrey H. Teckman, Jeffrey J. Brown, Shannon G. Farmakis

Erschienen in: Pediatric Radiology | Ausgabe 6/2019

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Abstract

Background

Pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are at increased risk of gadolinium deposition given the potential need for multiple contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance enterography (MRE) exams over their lifetime.

Objective

To determine whether gadolinium-based contrast agents are necessary in assessing active bowel inflammation on MRE in pediatric patients with known or suspected IBD.

Materials and methods

We conducted a retrospective study of 77 patients (7–18 years; 68.8% male) with known (n=58) or suspected (n=19) IBD and endoscopy with biopsy performed within 30 days of MRE without and with contrast evaluated bowel and non-bowel findings. During three visual analysis sessions, two radiologists reviewed pre-, post-, and pre-/post-contrast MRE images. A third radiologist independently reviewed 27 studies to assess inter-reader reliability. We used Cohen kappa (κ), Fleiss kappa, (κF), McNemar test, and sensitivity and specificity to compare MRE readings to combined endoscopic/histopathological findings (the reference standard).

Results

The pre- and pre-/post-contrast-enhanced MRE vs. combined endoscopic/histopathological results had moderate agreement (85.7%; κ 0.713, P<0.001; P-value 0.549). Compared to combined endoscopy/histopathology, pre- vs. pre-/post-contrast sensitivity (67%, confidence interval [CI] 0.53–0.79 vs. 67%, CI 0.53–0.79) and specificity (80%, CI 0.59–0.92 vs. 68%, CI 0.46–0.84) varied little (κ 0.42, P<0.001 and κ 0.32, P=0.003, respectively). The three readers had moderate agreement (85.2%; κ 0.695, P=0.001; P-value 0.625). More penetrating complications were identified following contrast administration (P-value 0.04).

Conclusion

Use of a contrast agent does not improve the detection of active inflammation in the terminal ileum and colon compared to non-contrast MRE, although use of a contrast agent does aid in the detection of penetrating disease.
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Metadaten
Titel
Diagnostic accuracy of non-contrast magnetic resonance enterography in detecting active bowel inflammation in pediatric patients with diagnosed or suspected inflammatory bowel disease to determine necessity of gadolinium-based contrast agents
verfasst von
Stacy J. Kim
Thomas L. Ratchford
Paula M. Buchanan
Dhiren R. Patel
Ting Y. Tao
Jeffrey H. Teckman
Jeffrey J. Brown
Shannon G. Farmakis
Publikationsdatum
21.03.2019
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Pediatric Radiology / Ausgabe 6/2019
Print ISSN: 0301-0449
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1998
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00247-019-04369-6

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