Abstract

High-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) requires longer immobilization time than conventional radiography, which challenges patient acceptance and image quality. Therefore, the aim was to investigate the acceptance of HR-pQCT in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and secondly the effect of an inflatable hand immobilization device on motion artefacts of the metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints. Fifty patients with established RA and a median (interquartile range) age of 64.3 (55.0-71.2) years had their MCP joints scanned by HR-pQCT with the hand positioned with and without an inflatable immobilization device followed by a full radiographic examination and a questionnaire on the imaging experience. The comparability of the erosion measures was investigated with and without the immobilization device using Bland-Altman plot and intrareader repeatability by intraclass correlation coefficient. The motion artefacts were graded for each acquisition, and intrareader repeatability was investigated by Cohen's kappa coefficient. Forty percent of the patients preferred HR-pQCT imaging, only 6% preferred conventional X-ray. Seventy-four percent reported it was not difficult to keep their fingers steady during the scan. Sixty percent of the patients reported the immobilization device helped keep their fingers steady. However, as motion artefacts were sparse, no clinically relevant difference was observed concerning the effect of the immobilization device on readability. The intrareader repeatability and comparability for the erosion measures were excellent. The high patient acceptance adds to the feasibility of HR-pQCT imaging of MCP joints in RA. The inflatable immobilization device did not reduce motion-induced image degradation.

Highlights

  • High-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) is a promising imaging modality for monitoring of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) [1,2]

  • The high acceptance among patients adds to the feasibility of HR-pQCT imaging of MCP joints in patients with RA

  • The inflatable immobilization device did not reduce motion-induced image degradation, as the overall visual grading for motion artefacts was low for imaging of the MCP joints in both acquisitions

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Summary

Introduction

High-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT) is a promising imaging modality for monitoring of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) [1,2]. HR-pQCT imaging time for the MCP joints alone yields an acquisition time of nine minutes, which are far longer than the current gold-standard conventional X-ray. The patient acceptance of HR-pQCT imaging has not been investigated. The long imaging time may, induce motion-induced image degradation. A previous study, have shown that HR-pQCT imaging of the radius had to be repeated for 67% of the patients due to motion artefacts [5]. The acquisition time for the radius is only three minutes. The nine minutes acquisition time, for the MCP joints, might exacerbate the motion artefacts. Motion-induced image degradation and the number of repeated acquisitions are rarely reported for the MCP joints [6,7,8,9]

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