Abstract

SummaryBackgroundMagnetic resonance enterography (MRE) and ultrasound are used to image Crohn's disease, but their comparative accuracy for assessing disease extent and activity is not known with certainty. Therefore, we did a multicentre trial to address this issue.MethodsWe recruited patients from eight UK hospitals. Eligible patients were 16 years or older, with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease or with established disease and suspected relapse. Consecutive patients had MRE and ultrasound in addition to standard investigations. Discrepancy between MRE and ultrasound for the presence of small bowel disease triggered an additional investigation, if not already available. The primary outcome was difference in per-patient sensitivity for small bowel disease extent (correct identification and segmental localisation) against a construct reference standard (panel diagnosis). This trial is registered with the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial, number ISRCTN03982913, and has been completed.Findings284 patients completed the trial (133 in the newly diagnosed group, 151 in the relapse group). Based on the reference standard, 233 (82%) patients had small bowel Crohn's disease. The sensitivity of MRE for small bowel disease extent (80% [95% CI 72–86]) and presence (97% [91–99]) were significantly greater than that of ultrasound (70% [62–78] for disease extent, 92% [84–96] for disease presence); a 10% (95% CI 1–18; p=0·027) difference for extent, and 5% (1–9; p=0·025) difference for presence. The specificity of MRE for small bowel disease extent (95% [85–98]) was significantly greater than that of ultrasound (81% [64–91]); a difference of 14% (1–27; p=0·039). The specificity for small bowel disease presence was 96% (95% CI 86–99) with MRE and 84% (65–94) with ultrasound (difference 12% [0–25]; p=0·054). There were no serious adverse events.InterpretationBoth MRE and ultrasound have high sensitivity for detecting small bowel disease presence and both are valid first-line investigations, and viable alternatives to ileocolonoscopy. However, in a national health service setting, MRE is generally the preferred radiological investigation when available because its sensitivity and specificity exceed ultrasound significantly.FundingNational Institute of Health and Research Health Technology Assessment.

Highlights

  • Small bowel imaging is fundamental for comprehensive phenotyping of Crohn’s disease and essential to direct therapeutic strategy.[1]

  • In the past 5–10 years enthusiasm has dwindled, and barium fluoroscopy is being increasingly replaced by crosssectional imaging, namely computed tomography enterography (CTE), magnetic resonance enterography (MRE), and ultra­sound

  • Study design and participants The METRIC study is a multicentre trial that compares the diagnostic accuracy of MRE and enteric ultrasound for the presence, extent, and activity of small bowel Crohn’s disease in newly diagnosed patients or patients with established disease and suspected relapse

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Summary

Introduction

Small bowel imaging is fundamental for comprehensive phenotyping of Crohn’s disease and essential to direct therapeutic strategy.[1] Barium fluoroscopy has long been the bedrock of small bowel investigation, providing detailed mucosal assessment.[2] in the past 5–10 years enthusiasm has dwindled, and barium fluoroscopy is being increasingly replaced by crosssectional imaging, namely computed tomography enterography (CTE), magnetic resonance enterography (MRE), and ultra­sound. As barium fluoroscopy is abandoned, dissemination of the various cross-sectional imaging technologies has been relatively uncontrolled, despite a paucity of supportive data from methodologically sound prospective multicentre studies. This scarcity of robust evidence is concerning given the pivotal role assumed by small bowel imaging over the lifetime of patients with Crohn’s disease.

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