Abstract

IntroductionInflammatory involvement of the anterior chest wall (ACW) affects the quality of life of patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA), although involvement of the ACW is often neglected on clinical and imaging evaluation. Whole-body (WB) MRI is an imaging method used to assess the ACW in addition to the sacroiliac joints and spine without inconvenience for patients. Our goals in this study were to describe the distribution of ACW inflammation by WB MRI in both early and established SpA and associations between clinical and imaging findings indicative of inflammation.MethodsThe ACWs of 122 consecutive SpA patients (95 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and 27 with nonradiographic SpA (nrSpA)) and 75 healthy controls were scanned by sagittal and coronal WB MRI. The MRI scans were scored independently in random order by seven readers blinded to patient identifiers. Active and structural inflammatory lesions of the ACW were recorded on a web-based data entry form. ACW pain by patient self-report, ACW tenderness on physical examination according to the Maastricht Ankylosing Spondylitis Enthesitis Score (MASES) and lesions detected by MRI were analyzed descriptively. κ statistics served to assess the agreement between clinical and imaging findings.ResultsACW pain or tenderness was present in 26% of patients, with little difference between AS and nrSpA patients. Bone marrow edema (BME), erosion and fat infiltration were recorded in 44.3%, 34.4% and 27.0% of SpA patients and in 9.3%, 12.0% and 5.3% of controls, respectively. Lesions found by MRI occurred more frequently in AS patients (BME, erosion and fat infiltration in 49.5%, 36.8% and 33.7%, respectively) than in nrSpA patients (25.9%, 25.9% and 3.7%, respectively). The joint most frequently affected by lesions found on MRI scans was the manubriosternal joint. The κ values between clinical assessments and MRI inflammation ranged from -0.10 to only 0.33 for both AS and nrSpA patients.ConclusionsAmong SpA patients, 26% had clinical involvement of the ACW. WB MRI signs of ACW inflammation were found in a substantial proportion of patients with AS (49.5%) and nrSpA (25.9%). There was no association between clinical assessments of ACW, including the MASES, and MRI features.

Highlights

  • Inflammatory involvement of the anterior chest wall (ACW) affects the quality of life of patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA), involvement of the ACW is often neglected on clinical and imaging evaluation

  • Definitions of lesions of the anterior chest wall detected by whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) We developed standardized definitions of active and structural inflammatory lesions in the ACW detected by MRI

  • The median symptom duration in the ankylosing spondylitis (AS) group was 11 years compared with 1.2 years in the nonradiographic axial SpA (nrSpA) group

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammatory involvement of the anterior chest wall (ACW) affects the quality of life of patients with spondyloarthritis (SpA), involvement of the ACW is often neglected on clinical and imaging evaluation. Researchers in uncontrolled studies of ACW inflammation who assessed the association between clinical features and various abnormalities using different imaging modalities have shown inconsistent results regarding the frequency of ACW involvement and associations with imaging findings [2,3,4,5,6,7]. This may partly reflect the lack of a systematic methodology and inclusion of patients at various stages of disease. Advantages of MRI over radiography, computed tomography and scintigraphy for imaging the ACW are the concomitant assessment of active and structural lesions, the precise anatomical visualization of inflammatory lesions due to superior spatial and contrast resolution, multiplanar capability and the absence of radiation [11]

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