From the Departments of Radiology (B.Z., M.E., A.B., Y.-M.C, R.A.B.)
Ophthalmology (N.T., A.-D.C.), Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2019 Mar;40(3):558-561. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A5975. Epub 2019 Feb 14.
No MR imaging measurement criteria are available for the diagnosis of optic nerve atrophy. We determined a threshold optic nerve area on MR imaging that predicts a clinical diagnosis of optic nerve atrophy and assessed the relationship between optic nerve area and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness measured by optical coherence tomography, an ancillary test used to evaluate optic nerve disorders.
We evaluated 26 patients with suspected optic nerve atrophy (8 with unilateral, 13 with bilateral and 5 with suspected but not demonstrable optic nerve atrophy) who had both orbital MR imaging and optical coherence tomography examinations. Forty-five patients without optic nerve atrophy served as controls. Coronal inversion recovery images were used to measure optic nerve area on MR imaging. Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness was determined by optical coherence tomography. Individual eyes were treated separately; however, bootstrapping was used to account for clustering when appropriate. Correlation coefficients were used to evaluate relationships; receiver operating characteristic curves, to investigate predictive accuracy.
There was a significant difference in optic nerve area between patients' affected eyes with optic nerve atrophy (mean, 3.09 ± 1.09 mm), patients' unaffected eyes (mean, 5.27 ± 1.39 mm; = .008), and control eyes (mean, 6.27 ± 2.64 mm; < .001). Optic nerve area ≤ 4.0 mm had a sensitivity of 0.85 and a specificity of 0.83 in predicting the diagnosis of optic nerve atrophy. A significant relationship was found between optic nerve area and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness ( = 0.68, < .001).
MR imaging-measured optic nerve area ≤ 4.0 mm has moderately high sensitivity and specificity for predicting optic nerve atrophy, making it a potential diagnostic tool for radiologists.
目前尚无磁共振成像(MRI)测量视神经萎缩的诊断标准。我们确定了一个视神经面积阈值,该阈值可预测视神经萎缩的临床诊断,并评估了视神经面积与光相干断层扫描(OCT)测量的视网膜神经纤维层厚度之间的关系,OCT 是一种用于评估视神经疾病的辅助检查。
我们评估了 26 例疑似视神经萎缩患者(单侧 8 例,双侧 13 例,疑似但未证实视神经萎缩 5 例),这些患者均行眼眶 MRI 和 OCT 检查。45 例无视神经萎缩的患者作为对照组。冠状位反转恢复图像用于测量 MRI 上的视神经面积。OCT 用于测量视网膜神经纤维层厚度。单独分析每只眼,但在适当情况下使用自举法来校正聚类。使用相关系数评估相关性;使用受试者工作特征曲线来研究预测准确性。
视神经萎缩患者患侧眼(平均 3.09 ± 1.09 mm)、健侧眼(平均 5.27 ± 1.39 mm;P =.008)和对照组眼(平均 6.27 ± 2.64 mm;P <.001)的视神经面积有显著差异。视神经面积≤4.0 mm 预测视神经萎缩的诊断具有 0.85 的敏感性和 0.83 的特异性。视神经面积与视网膜神经纤维层厚度之间存在显著相关性(r = 0.68,P <.001)。
MRI 测量的视神经面积≤4.0 mm 对预测视神经萎缩具有较高的敏感性和特异性,有望成为放射科医生的一种潜在诊断工具。