Author:
Connor Steve,Grzeda Mariusz T.,Jamshidi Babak,Ourselin Sebastien,Hajnal Joseph V.,Pai Irumee
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Delayed post-gadolinium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detects changes of endolymphatic hydrops (EH) within the inner ear in Meniere’s disease (MD). A systematic review with meta-analysis was conducted to summarise the diagnostic performance of MRI descriptors across the range of MD clinical classifications.
Materials and methods
Case-controlled studies documenting the diagnostic performance of MRI descriptors in distinguishing MD ears from asymptomatic ears or ears with other audio-vestibular conditions were identified (MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus databases: updated 17/2/2022). Methodological quality was evaluated with Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies version 2. Results were pooled using a bivariate random-effects model for evaluation of sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic odds ratio (DOR). Meta-regression evaluated sources of heterogeneity, and subgroup analysis for individual clinical classifications was performed.
Results
The meta-analysis included 66 unique studies and 3073 ears with MD (mean age 40.2–67.2 years), evaluating 11 MRI descriptors. The combination of increased perilymphatic enhancement (PLE) and EH (3 studies, 122 MD ears) achieved the highest sensitivity (87% (95% CI: 79.92%)) whilst maintaining high specificity (91% (95% CI: 85.95%)). The diagnostic performance of “high grade cochlear EH” and “any EH” descriptors did not significantly differ between monosymptomatic cochlear MD and the latest reference standard for definite MD (p = 0.3; p = 0.09). Potential sources of bias were case-controlled design, unblinded observers and variable reference standard, whilst differing MRI techniques introduced heterogeneity.
Conclusions
The combination of increased PLE and EH optimised sensitivity and specificity for MD, whilst some MRI descriptors also performed well in diagnosing monosymptomatic cochlear MD.
Key Points
• A meta-analysis of delayed post-gadolinium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the diagnosis of Meniere’s disease is reported for the first time and comprised 66 studies (3073 ears).
• Increased enhancement of the perilymphatic space of the inner ear is shown to be a key MRI feature for the diagnosis of Meniere’s disease.
• MRI diagnosis of Meniere’s disease can be usefully applied across a range of clinical classifications including patients with cochlear symptoms alone.
Funder
Centre For Medical Engineering, King’s College London
National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at Guy’s & St Thomas’ Hospitals and King’s College London
Cancer Research UK National Cancer Imaging Translational Accelerator
UK Research & Innovation London Medical Imaging and Artificial Intelligence Centre
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine
Cited by
8 articles.
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