BackgroundMRI is a radiation-free emerging alternative to CT in systemic sclerosis related interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) assessment. We aimed to compare a T2 radial TSE and a PD UTE MRI sequence with CT in SSc-ILD extent evaluation and correlations with pulmonary function tests (PFT). Material and methods29 SSc-ILD patients underwent CT, MRI and PFT. ILD extent was visually assessed. Lin’s concordance correlation coefficients (CCC) and Kruskal Wallis test (p-value < 0.05) were computed for inter-method comparison. Patients were divided in limited and extended disease, defining extended ILD with two methods: (A) ILD>30% or 10%<ILD≤30% with FVC%<70%; (B) ILD>20% or 20% with FVC%<70%. MRI Sensitivity, Specificity, Positive Predictive Value (PPV), Negative Predictive Value (NPV) and Accuracy were assessed. Pearson correlation coefficients r (p-value<0.025) were computed between ILD extents and PFT (FVC% and DLCO%). ResultsMedian ILD extents were 11%, 11%, 10% on CT, radial TSE and UTE, respectively. CCC between CT and MRI was 0.95 for both sequences (Kruskal-Wallis p-value=0.64). Sensitivity, Specificity, PPV, NPV and Accuracy in identifying extended disease were: (A) 87.5 %, 100 %, 100 %, 95.5 and 96.6 % with radial TSE and 87.5 %, 95.2 %, 87.5 %, 95.2 and 93.1 % with UTE; (B) 86.7 %, 86.4 %, 66.7 %, 95.0 % and 86.2 % for both sequences. Pearson r of CT, radial TSE and UTE ILD extents with FVC were −0.66, –0.60 and −0.68 with FVC, −0.59, −0.56 and −0.57 with DLCO, respectively (p<0.002). ConclusionsMRI sequences may have similar accuracy to CT to determine SSc-ILD extent and severity, with analogous correlations with PFT.