Budzik Jean-François, Ding Juliette, Norberciak Laurène, Pascart Tristan, Toumi Hechmi, Verclytte Sébastien, Coursier Raphaël
Lille Catholic Hospitals, Imaging Department, Lille Catholic University, Lille, France; PMOI Physiopathology of Inflammatory Bone Diseases, EA 4490, Lille, France.
Lille Catholic Hospitals, Imaging Department, Lille Catholic University, Lille, France.
Eur J Radiol. 2017 Mar;88:129-134. doi: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2016.12.023. Epub 2016 Dec 24.
The role of inflammation in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis is being given major interest, and inflammation is closely linked with vascularization. It was recently demonstrated that dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) could identify the subchondral bone marrow vascularization changes occurring in osteoarthritis in animals. These changes appeared before cartilage lesions were visible and were correlated with osteoarthritis severity. Thus the opportunity to obtain an objective assessment of bone vascularization in non-invasive conditions in humans might help better understanding osteoarthritis pathophysiology and finding new biomarkers. We hypothesized that, as in animals, DCE-MRI has the ability to identify subchondral bone marrow vascularization changes in human osteoarthritis. We performed knee MRI in 19 patients with advanced knee osteoarthritis. We assessed subchondral bone marrow vascularization in medial and lateral femorotibial compartments with DCE-MRI and graded osteoarthritis lesions on MR images. Statistical analysis assessed intra- and inter-observer agreement, compared DCE-MRI values between the different subchondral zones, and sought for an influence of age, sex, body mass index, and osteoarthritis garde on these values. The intra- and inter-observer agreement for DCE-MRI values were excellent. These values were significantly higher in the femorotibial compartment the most affected by osteoarthritis, both in femur and tibia (p<0.0001) and were significantly and positively correlated with cartilage lesions (p=0.02) and bone marrow oedema grade (p<0.0001) after adjustment. We concluded that, as in animals, subchondral bone marrow vascularization changes assessed with DCE-MRI were correlated with osteoarthritis severity in humans.
炎症在骨关节炎发病机制中的作用正受到广泛关注,且炎症与血管生成密切相关。最近有研究表明,动态对比增强磁共振成像(DCE-MRI)能够识别动物骨关节炎中发生的软骨下骨髓血管生成变化。这些变化在软骨损伤可见之前就已出现,且与骨关节炎的严重程度相关。因此,在人体非侵入性条件下对骨血管生成进行客观评估,可能有助于更好地理解骨关节炎的病理生理学并发现新的生物标志物。我们假设,与动物一样,DCE-MRI有能力识别人类骨关节炎中软骨下骨髓血管生成的变化。我们对19例晚期膝关节骨关节炎患者进行了膝关节MRI检查。我们用DCE-MRI评估了股骨内侧和外侧胫股关节间室的软骨下骨髓血管生成情况,并在MR图像上对骨关节炎病变进行分级。统计分析评估了观察者内和观察者间的一致性,比较了不同软骨下区域的DCE-MRI值,并探讨了年龄、性别、体重指数和骨关节炎分级对这些值的影响。DCE-MRI值的观察者内和观察者间一致性极佳。在骨关节炎最严重影响的胫股关节间室,无论是股骨还是胫骨,这些值都显著更高(p<0.0001),并且在调整后与软骨损伤(p=0.02)和骨髓水肿分级(p<0.0001)显著正相关。我们得出结论,与动物一样,用DCE-MRI评估的软骨下骨髓血管生成变化与人类骨关节炎的严重程度相关。