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Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis

Cortical demyelinating lesions are clinically important in multiple sclerosis, but notoriously difficult to visualize with MRI. At clinical field strengths, double inversion recovery MRI is most sensitive, but still only detects 18% of all histopathologically validated cortical lesions. More recentl...

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Autores principales: Bouman, Piet M, Steenwijk, Martijn D, Pouwels, Petra J W, Schoonheim, Menno M, Barkhof, Frederik, Jonkman, Laura E, Geurts, Jeroen J G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7586087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32889535
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa233
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author Bouman, Piet M
Steenwijk, Martijn D
Pouwels, Petra J W
Schoonheim, Menno M
Barkhof, Frederik
Jonkman, Laura E
Geurts, Jeroen J G
author_facet Bouman, Piet M
Steenwijk, Martijn D
Pouwels, Petra J W
Schoonheim, Menno M
Barkhof, Frederik
Jonkman, Laura E
Geurts, Jeroen J G
author_sort Bouman, Piet M
collection PubMed
description Cortical demyelinating lesions are clinically important in multiple sclerosis, but notoriously difficult to visualize with MRI. At clinical field strengths, double inversion recovery MRI is most sensitive, but still only detects 18% of all histopathologically validated cortical lesions. More recently, phase-sensitive inversion recovery was suggested to have a higher sensitivity than double inversion recovery, although this claim was not histopathologically validated. Therefore, this retrospective study aimed to provide clarity on this matter by identifying which MRI sequence best detects histopathologically-validated cortical lesions at clinical field strength, by comparing sensitivity and specificity of the thus far most commonly used MRI sequences, which are T(2), fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery. Post-mortem MRI was performed on non-fixed coronal hemispheric brain slices of 23 patients with progressive multiple sclerosis directly after autopsy, at 3 T, using T(1) and proton-density/T(2)-weighted, as well as FLAIR, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery sequences. A total of 93 cortical tissue blocks were sampled from these slices. Blinded to histopathology, all MRI sequences were consensus scored for cortical lesions. Subsequently, tissue samples were stained for proteolipid protein (myelin) and scored for cortical lesion types I–IV (mixed grey matter/white matter, intracortical, subpial and cortex-spanning lesions, respectively). MRI scores were compared to histopathological scores to calculate sensitivity and specificity per sequence. Next, a retrospective (unblinded) scoring was performed to explore maximum scoring potential per sequence. Histopathologically, 224 cortical lesions were detected, of which the majority were subpial. In a mixed model, sensitivity of T(1), proton-density/T(2), FLAIR, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery was 8.9%, 5.4%, 5.4%, 22.8% and 23.7%, respectively (20, 12, 12, 51 and 53 cortical lesions). Specificity of the prospective scoring was 80.0%, 75.0%, 80.0%, 91.1% and 88.3%. Sensitivity and specificity did not significantly differ between double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery, while phase-sensitive inversion recovery identified more lesions than double inversion recovery upon retrospective analysis (126 versus 95; P < 0.001). We conclude that, at 3 T, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery sequences outperform conventional sequences T(1), proton-density/T(2) and FLAIR. While their overall sensitivity does not exceed 25%, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery are highly pathologically specific when using existing scoring criteria and their use is recommended for optimal cortical lesion assessment in multiple sclerosis.
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spelling pubmed-75860872020-10-30 Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis Bouman, Piet M Steenwijk, Martijn D Pouwels, Petra J W Schoonheim, Menno M Barkhof, Frederik Jonkman, Laura E Geurts, Jeroen J G Brain Original Articles Cortical demyelinating lesions are clinically important in multiple sclerosis, but notoriously difficult to visualize with MRI. At clinical field strengths, double inversion recovery MRI is most sensitive, but still only detects 18% of all histopathologically validated cortical lesions. More recently, phase-sensitive inversion recovery was suggested to have a higher sensitivity than double inversion recovery, although this claim was not histopathologically validated. Therefore, this retrospective study aimed to provide clarity on this matter by identifying which MRI sequence best detects histopathologically-validated cortical lesions at clinical field strength, by comparing sensitivity and specificity of the thus far most commonly used MRI sequences, which are T(2), fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery. Post-mortem MRI was performed on non-fixed coronal hemispheric brain slices of 23 patients with progressive multiple sclerosis directly after autopsy, at 3 T, using T(1) and proton-density/T(2)-weighted, as well as FLAIR, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery sequences. A total of 93 cortical tissue blocks were sampled from these slices. Blinded to histopathology, all MRI sequences were consensus scored for cortical lesions. Subsequently, tissue samples were stained for proteolipid protein (myelin) and scored for cortical lesion types I–IV (mixed grey matter/white matter, intracortical, subpial and cortex-spanning lesions, respectively). MRI scores were compared to histopathological scores to calculate sensitivity and specificity per sequence. Next, a retrospective (unblinded) scoring was performed to explore maximum scoring potential per sequence. Histopathologically, 224 cortical lesions were detected, of which the majority were subpial. In a mixed model, sensitivity of T(1), proton-density/T(2), FLAIR, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery was 8.9%, 5.4%, 5.4%, 22.8% and 23.7%, respectively (20, 12, 12, 51 and 53 cortical lesions). Specificity of the prospective scoring was 80.0%, 75.0%, 80.0%, 91.1% and 88.3%. Sensitivity and specificity did not significantly differ between double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery, while phase-sensitive inversion recovery identified more lesions than double inversion recovery upon retrospective analysis (126 versus 95; P < 0.001). We conclude that, at 3 T, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery sequences outperform conventional sequences T(1), proton-density/T(2) and FLAIR. While their overall sensitivity does not exceed 25%, double inversion recovery and phase-sensitive inversion recovery are highly pathologically specific when using existing scoring criteria and their use is recommended for optimal cortical lesion assessment in multiple sclerosis. Oxford University Press 2020-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7586087/ /pubmed/32889535 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa233 Text en © The Author(s) (2020). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Articles
Bouman, Piet M
Steenwijk, Martijn D
Pouwels, Petra J W
Schoonheim, Menno M
Barkhof, Frederik
Jonkman, Laura E
Geurts, Jeroen J G
Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title_full Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title_fullStr Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title_full_unstemmed Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title_short Histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
title_sort histopathology-validated recommendations for cortical lesion imaging in multiple sclerosis
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7586087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32889535
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa233
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