Novel quantitative digital image analysis methodology for assessment of inflammatory changes in MRI data in a post-hoc analysis of data acquired from a phase IIb study of baricitinib in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis

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Purpose: To evaluate a novel quantitative methodology to assess inflammatory changes in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and the impact of image quality on imaging outcomes compared to the RA Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score (RAMRIS). Methods: Three-dimensional, T1-weighted, fat-suppressed MRI sequences of the hand/wrist before and after intravenous Gadolinium contrast from patients with RA in a placebo-controlled clinical trial (NCT01185353) were re-evaluated post hoc. The methodology was integrated into proprietary software (DYNAMIKA®) and assessed inflammation through pixelated measurements of the contrast-enhancing (inflammatory) volume. A semi-automatic approach outlined contrast-enhancing synovial tissue in the wrist and second to fifth metacarpophalangeal joints with a rough region of interest (ROI); quantitative imaging biomarkers were generated by means of quantitative total volume of inflammation and quantitative degree of inflammation relative to the signal in a 1 cm in diameter ROI in the center of the thenar or lumbrical muscle for internal reference. The time from Gadolinium injection to finalization of the post-contrast images was calculated from the images’ Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine header. An experienced reader graded image quality as poor, acceptable, or good. Results: Results from this quantitative methodology, especially when excluding images with poor quality scores (14–32%), provided a more pronounced and monotonically increasing dose-response than the original RAMRIS results on synovitis and osteitis. Conclusions: This computer-aided quantitative scoring method provided continuous measures of inflammatory changes relative to muscle and may be more sensitive and interpretable concerning dose/response separation between RA treatment groups.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109877
JournalEuropean Journal of Radiology
Volume143
Number of pages9
ISSN0720-048X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Eli Lilly and Company

    Research areas

  • Baricitinib, Biomarker, Inflammation, MRI, Quantitative imaging, Rheumatoid arthritis

ID: 303576407