Dixon T2 imaging of vertebral bone edema: reliability and comparison with short tau inversion recovery

Acta Radiol. 2024 Mar;65(3):273-283. doi: 10.1177/02841851221146130. Epub 2022 Dec 22.

Abstract

Background: It is uncertain whether T2-weighted Dixon water images (DixonT2w) and short tau inversion recovery (STIR) are interchangeable when evaluating vertebral bone edema, or if one method is superior or visualizes the edema differently.

Purpose: To compare image quality and Modic change (MC)-related edema between DixonT2w and STIR and estimate inter-observer reliability for MC edema on DixonT2w.

Material and methods: Consecutive patients (n = 120) considered for the Antibiotics in Modic changes (AIM) trial underwent lumbar 1.5-T magnetic resonance imaging with two-point DixonT2w and STIR. Two radiologists assessed MC-related high-signal lesions on DixonT2w and compared image quality and lesion extent with STIR. Cohen's kappa and mean of differences ± limits of agreement were calculated.

Results: Fat suppression and artefacts were similar on DixonT2w and STIR in 116 of 120 (97%) patients. Lesion conspicuity was similar in 88, better on STIR in 10, and better on DixonT2w in 9 of 107 patients with MC-related high-signal lesions. Contrast-to-noise ratio for STIR versus DixonT2w was 19.1 versus 17.1 (mean of differences 2.0 ± 8.2). Of 228 lesions L4-S1, 215 (94%) had similar extent on DixonT2w and STIR, 11 were smaller/undetected on STIR, and two were smaller/undetected on DixonT2w. Lesions missed on STIR (n = 9) or DixonT2w (n = 1) had a weak signal increase on the other sequence (≤17%; 0% = vertebral body, 100% = cerebrospinal fluid). Inter-observer reliability (mean kappa L4-S1) was very good for presence (0.87), moderate for height (0.44), and good for volume (0.63) of lesions on DixonT2w.

Conclusion: DixonT2w provided similar visualization of MC-related vertebral edema as STIR.

Keywords: Magnetic resonance imaging; adults; imaging sequences; observer performance; skeletal-axial; spine.

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Trials as Topic
  • Edema / diagnostic imaging
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging* / methods
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Spine*