Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Perianal fistulizing Crohn’s disease (CD-PAF) is difficult to treat, and several MR scoring systems have been developed to assess treatment response. OBJECTIVE To assess the relationship between CD-PAF MR scoring systems and radiologists’ subjective assessment of CD-PAF severity and treatment response on baseline and follow-up pelvic MR. METHODS Retrospective single-institution study of consecutive symptomatic CD-PAF patients who underwent pelvic MR before and ≥3 months after initiating biologic therapy during a 10-year period (December 2011 to December 2021). One of four radiologists interpreted baseline and follow-up MRs. Scoring systems included variables in the modified Van Assche index (mVAI), magnetic resonance novel index for fistula imaging in CD (MAGNIFI-CD), and pediatric MR-based perianal Crohn’s disease (PEMPAC) index. For initial and follow-up MR, a 5-point Likert scale assessed severity (1=mild, 3=moderate, 5=marked). On follow-up MR, radiologists evaluated fistula response as 1-improved, 3-stable, or 5-worsened CD-PAF severity. All four study radiologists scored the baseline MR in 20 patients to calculate inter-reader agreement statistics. Interrater reliability was assessed with the Krippendorff α coefficient for categorical variables and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for continuous variables. RESULTS The cohort included 96 CD-PAF patients (50 men; mean age=33.0 years) with 192 baseline and follow-up MRs. Agreement between radiologists was moderate to substantial for the MAGNIFI-CD, mVAI, PEMPAC, and Likert scores, with ICC values of 0.716, 0.756, 0.535, and 0.679, respectively. Individual components of MR scoring systems had fair to substantial agreement (Alpha: 0.195 to 0.730). Significant univariate associations were found between MR scoring systems and radiologists’ Likert severity assessments (p<.001, Pearson correlation coefficients ≥.820). In patients meeting criteria for change in disease severity (n=17), all scoring systems demonstrated AUC values ≥.93. CONCLUSION The MR scoring systems for CD-PAF (MAGNIFI-CD, mVAI, and PEMPAC) demonstrated strong associations with radiologists’ subjective assessments of severity and treatment response on baseline and follow-up pelvic MR. These scoring systems demonstrated better inter-reader agreement compared to individual MR factors. CLINICAL IMPACT The introduction of new medical therapies for CD-PAF and the growing utilization of MR fistula response in CD-PAF highlight the importance of a standardized approach in defining changes in CD-PAF severity on MR. Table 1 Inter-reader reliability perianal Crohn’s disease MR scoring systems and length of fistula tract

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