Sex-specific diagnostic efficacy of MRI in axial spondyloarthritis: challenging the ‘One Size Fits All’ notion

Author:

Ulas Sevtap TugceORCID,Proft FabianORCID,Diekhoff TorstenORCID,Rios Valeria,Rademacher JudithORCID,Protopopov MikhailORCID,Greese Juliane,Eshed IrisORCID,Adams Lisa C,Hermann Kay Geert AORCID,Ohrndorf SarahORCID,Poddubnyy DenisORCID,Ziegeler KatharinaORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesSex-specific differences in the presentation of axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) may contribute to a diagnostic delay in women. The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic performance of MRI findings comparing men and women.MethodsPatients with back pain from six different prospective cohorts (n=1194) were screened for inclusion in this post hoc analysis. Two blinded readers scored the MRI data sets independently for the presence of ankylosis, erosion, sclerosis, fat metaplasia and bone marrow oedema. Χ2tests were performed to compare lesion frequencies. Contingency tables were used to calculate markers for diagnostic performance, with clinical diagnosis as the standard of reference. The positive and negative likelihood ratios (LR+/LR–) were used to calculate the diagnostic OR (DOR) to assess the diagnostic performance.ResultsAfter application of exclusion criteria, 526 patients (379 axSpA (136 women and 243 men) and 147 controls with chronic low back pain) were included. No major sex-specific differences in the diagnostic performance were shown for bone marrow oedema (DOR m: 3.0; f: 3.9). Fat metaplasia showed a better diagnostic performance in men (DOR 37.9) than in women (DOR 5.0). Lower specificity was seen in women for erosions (77% vs 87%), sclerosis (44% vs 66%), fat metaplasia (87% vs 96%).ConclusionThe diagnostic performance of structural MRI markers is substantially lower in female patients with axSpA; active inflammatory lesions show comparable performance in both sexes, while still overall inferior to structural markers. This leads to a comparably higher risk of false positive findings in women.

Funder

Berlin Institute of Health

Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy,Rheumatology

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