Publication | Closed Access
Correlating MRI and clinical disease activity in multiple sclerosis
294
Citations
30
References
1995
Year
NeurorehabilitationSpinal Cord InjuryMs PatientsMedical ImagingNeurological DisorderNeuroimagingNeurologyNeuroscienceMultiple SclerosisBrain LesionNeuropathologyMedicineDiagnostic NeuroradiologyMagnetic Resonance ImagingRadiologyHealth Sciences
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is being used as an outcome criterion in therapeutic trials in multiple sclerosis (MS) on the assumption that it, as a sensitive marker of biologic disease activity, could serve as a surrogate marker of disability. We evaluated the relation between MRI findings and disability in a quantitative follow-up study of 48 MS patients. Median duration of follow-up was 24 months (range, 10 to 42 months). Computer-assisted volume measurements employing a seed-growing technique yielded a standard error of measurement of 0.275 cm2. The median total area of the hyperintense lesions on the initial T2-weighted images was 8.4 cm2. The median increase was 0.76 cm2/yr (9%). In a subgroup (n = 19) with short-TR/short-TE spin-echo (SE) images, we measured the hypointense lesion load. The median total area of the lesions at entry was 0.70 cm2, with a median increase of 0.28 cm2/yr (40%). The total area of the hyperintense lesions on the initial T2-weighted images showed a weak correlation with the Expanded Disability Status Scale score at entry (Spearman rank correlation coefficient [SRCC] = 0.30; 0.02 < p < 0.05). The increase in disability showed a positive correlation (SRCC = 0.19) with the increase in hyperintense lesion load on the T2-weighted SE images, but this correlation did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.09), probably because of lack of clinical progression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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