Exploring the differences between radiographic joint space width and MRI cartilage thickness changes using data from the IMI-APPROACH cohort
Jansen, Mylène P.; Roemer, Frank W.; Marijnissen, Anne Karien C.A.; Kloppenburg, Margreet; Blanco, Francisco J.; Haugen, Ida K.; Berenbaum, Francis; Lafeber, Floris P.J.G.; Welsing, Paco M.J.; Mastbergen, Simon C.; Wirth, Wolfgang
(2023) Skeletal Radiology, volume 52, issue 7, pp. 1339 - 1348
(Article)
Abstract
Objective: Longitudinal weight-bearing radiographic joint space width (JSW) and non-weight-bearing MRI-based cartilage thickness changes often show weak correlations. The current objective was to investigate these correlations, and to explore the influence of different factors that could contribute to longitudinal differences between the two methods. Methods: The current study included 178
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participants with medial osteoarthritis (OA) out of the 297 knee OA participants enrolled in the IMI-APPROACH cohort. Changes over 2 years in medial JSW (ΔJSWmed), minimum JSW (ΔJSWmin), and medial femorotibial cartilage thickness (ΔMFTC) were assessed using linear regression, using measurements from radiographs and MRI acquired at baseline, 6 months, and 1 and 2 years. Pearson R correlations were calculated. The influence of cartilage quality (T2 mapping), meniscal extrusion (MOAKS scoring), potential pain-induced unloading (difference in knee-specific pain scores), and increased loading (BMI) on the correlations was analyzed by dividing participants in groups based on each factor separately, and comparing correlations (slope and strength) between groups using linear regression models. Result: Correlations between ΔMFTC and ΔJSWmed and ΔJSWmin were statistically significant (p < 0.004) but weak (R < 0.35). Correlations were significantly different between groups based on cartilage quality and on meniscal extrusion: only patients with the lowest T2 values and with meniscal extrusion showed significant moderate correlations. Pain-induced unloading or BMI-induced loading did not influence correlations. Conclusions: While the amount of loading does not seem to make a difference, weight-bearing radiographic JSW changes are a better reflection of non-weight-bearing MRI cartilage thickness changes in knees with higher quality cartilage and with meniscal extrusion.
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Keywords: Cartilage thickness, JSW, Meniscus, MRI, T2 mapping, Weight-bearing, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Journal Article
ISSN: 0364-2348
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Note: Funding Information: IKH: research grant (ADVANCE) from Pfizer (payment to institution) and consulting fees from Novartis and GSK, outside of the submitted work. Funding Information: The research leading to these results has received support from the Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking under Grant Agreement no 115770, resources of which are composed of financial contribution from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) and EFPIA companies’ in kind contribution. See www.imi.europa.eu and http://www.approachproject.eu Funding Information: FB: Institutional grants from TRB Chemedica and Pfizer. Consulting fees from AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bone Therapeutics, Cellprothera, Galapagos, Gilead, Grunenthal, GSK, Eli Lilly, MerckSerono, Nordic Bioscience, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi, Servier, Peptinov, 4P Pharma. Honoraria for lectures from Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Viatris, Aché Laboratories. SShareholder of 4Moving Biotech, 4P Pharma and Peptinov. Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to International Skeletal Society (ISS).
(Peer reviewed)