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Objectives: To determine whether synovitis graded by radiologists using hybrid quantitative double-echo in steady-state (qDESS) images can be utilized as a non-contrast approach to assess synovitis in the knee, compared against the reference standard of contrast-enhanced MRI (CE-MRI).
Methods: Twenty-two knees (11 subjects) with moderate to severe osteoarthritis (OA) were scanned using CE-MRI, qDESS with a high diffusion weighting (qDESS), and qDESS with a low diffusion weighting (qDESS). Four radiologists graded the overall impression of synovitis, their diagnostic confidence, and regional grading of synovitis severity at four sites (suprapatellar pouch, intercondylar notch, and medial and lateral peripatellar recesses) in the knee using a 4-point scale. Agreement between CE-MRI and qDESS, inter-rater agreement, and intra-rater agreement were assessed using a linearly weighted Gwet's AC2.
Results: Good agreement was seen between CE-MRI and both qDESS (AC2 = 0.74) and qDESS (AC2 = 0.66) for the overall impression of synovitis, but both qDESS sequences tended to underestimate the severity of synovitis compared to CE-MRI. Good inter-rater agreement was seen for both qDESS sequences (AC2 = 0.74 for qDESS, AC2 = 0.64 for qDESS), and good intra-rater agreement was seen for both sequences as well (qDESS AC2 = 0.78, qDESS AC2 = 0.80). Diagnostic confidence was moderate to high for qDESS (mean = 2.36) and slightly less than moderate for qDESS (mean = 1.86), compared to mostly high confidence for CE-MRI (mean = 2.73).
Conclusions: qDESS shows potential as an alternative MRI technique for assessing the severity of synovitis without the use of a gadolinium-based contrast agent.
Key Points: The use of the quantitative double-echo in steady-state (qDESS) sequence for synovitis assessment does not require the use of a gadolinium-based contrast agent. Preliminary results found that low diffusion-weighted qDESS (qDESS) shows good agreement to contrast-enhanced MRI for characterization of the severity of synovitis, with a relative bias towards underestimation of severity. Preliminary results also found that qDESS shows good inter- and intra-rater agreement for the depiction of synovitis, particularly for readers experienced with the sequence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-021-08025-2 | DOI Listing |
J Orthop Res
August 2025
Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
The purpose was to assess the agreement in measures of acute knee cartilage thickness and composition change after loading in clinical knee osteoarthritis (OA) between two magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) acquisition approaches: (1) single sequence approach using quantitative double-echo in steady-state (qDESS), which allows simultaneous morphological and compositional scanning, versus (2) multi-sequence approach that captures morphology (fast spoiled gradient recalled (FSPGR) or qDESS) and composition (multi-echo spin echo (MESE)) separately. Twenty adults with clinical knee OA participated. 3T MR scans were acquired before and immediately after a 25-min treadmill walk at a standardized speed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMAGMA
April 2025
Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Objective: To clinically validate a fully automated cartilage segmentation technique from quantitative double-echo steady-state (qDESS) MRI supporting simultaneous estimation of cartilage T2 and morphology. Here, we test whether laminar (superficial and deep layer) T2 results from convolutional neural network (CNN) segmentations are consistent with those from manual expert segmentations.
Materials And Methods: The 3D qDESS sequence was acquired using 3 T MRI (resolution: 0.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage
November 2024
Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, University Hospital Basel, Basel Switzerland; Department of Spine Surgery, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland; Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland; Department of Clinical Research, University of Basel, B
Objective: To investigate the effect of unilateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury on cartilage thickness and composition, specifically laminar transverse relaxation time (T2) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in younger and older participants and to compare within-person side differences in these parameters between ACL-injured and healthy controls.
Design: Quantitative double-echo steady-state 3 Tesla MRI-sequences were acquired in both knees of 85 participants in four groups: 20-30 years: healthy, HEA, n = 24; ACL-injured, ACL, n = 23; 40-60 years: healthy, HEA, n = 24; ACL-injured, ACL, n = 14 (ACL injury 2-10 years prior to study inclusion). Weight-bearing femorotibial cartilages were manually segmented; cartilage T2 and thickness were computed using custom software.
J Magn Reson Imaging
February 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
MAGMA
October 2023
Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.