MRI of shoulder girdle in polymyalgia rheumatica: inflammatory findings and their diagnostic value

Author:

Fruth MartinORCID,Künitz Lucie,Martin-Seidel Philipp,Tsiami Styliani,Baraliakos XenofonORCID

Abstract

BackgroundNon-synovial inflammation as detected by MRI is characteristic in polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) with potentially high diagnostic value.ObjectiveThe objective is to describe inflammatory MRI findings in the shoulder girdle of patients with PMR and discriminate from other causes of shoulder girdle pain.MethodsRetrospective study of 496 contrast-enhanced MRI scans of the shoulder girdle from 122 PMR patients and 374 non-PMR cases. Two radiologists blinded to clinical and demographic information evaluated inflammation at six non-synovial plus three synovial sites for the presence or absence of inflammation. The prevalence of synovial and non-synovial inflammation, both alone and together with clinical information, was tested for its ability to differentiate PMR from non-PMR.ResultsA high prevalence of non-synovial inflammation was identified as striking imaging finding in PMR, in average 3.4±1.7, mean (M)±SD, out of the six predefined sites were inflamed compared with 1.1±1.4 (M±SD) in non-PMR group, p<0.001, with excellent discriminatory effect between PMR patients and non-PMR cases. The prevalence of synovitis also differed significantly between PMR patients and non-PMR cases, 2.5±0.8 (M±SD) vs 1.9±1.1 (M±SD) out of three predefined synovial sites, but with an inferior discriminatory effect. The detection of inflammation at three out of six predefined non-synovial sites differentiated PMR patients from controls with a sensitivity/specificity of 73.8%/85.8% and overall better performance than detection of synovitis alone (sensitivity/specificity of 86.1%/36.1%, respectively).ConclusionContrast-enhanced MRI of the shoulder girdle is a reliable imaging tool with significant diagnostic value in the assessment of patients suffering from PMR and differentiation to other conditions for shoulder girdle pain.

Publisher

BMJ

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