Abstract

Objective: Knee cartilage volume measurement requires significant time and training. Simplifying the measurement may improve feasibility. We investigated whether the area of cartilage shown on the middle slice of the medial and lateral tibial cartilages on sagittal MRI correlates with radiological features of osteoarthritis (OA), cartilage volume, and longitudinal change in cartilage volume.Methods: One hundred and seventy‐three subjects (normal and osteoarthritic), who had serial magnetic resonance imaging (cartilage volume measured) and baseline weight‐bearing antero–posterior radiographs of the same knee were examined.Results: In the lateral compartment, with increasing grade of OA there was a significant reduction in cartilage area. In the medial compartment, this was true for medial joint‐space narrowing (after adjusting for gender). There was a moderate to strong association between cartilage area and volume, especially in those with early or no OA. However, when change over time was examined, the strength of these relationships was weak.Conclusion: Our data suggests that cartilage area may provide a simple surrogate measure of cartilage volume, in cross‐sectional studies, after adjustment for gender: especially in subjects with early disease. However, before it can be widely used, further investigation will be required.

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