Digital X-ray radiogrammetry and its sensitivity and specificity for the identification of rheumatoid arthritis-related cortical hand bone loss

Digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) is a computer-assisted diagnosis technique for quantifying cortical hand bone mineral density (BMD) as well as the metacarpal index (MCI) in the metacarpal bones from radiographs. The objective was to compare DXR-BMD and DXR-MCI between healthy individuals and pati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of bone and mineral metabolism 2017-03, Vol.35 (2), p.192-198
Hauptverfasser: Pfeil, Alexander, Haugeberg, Glenn, Renz, Diane M., Reinhardt, Lisa, Jung, Christian, Franz, Marcus, Wolf, Gunter, Böttcher, Joachim
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) is a computer-assisted diagnosis technique for quantifying cortical hand bone mineral density (BMD) as well as the metacarpal index (MCI) in the metacarpal bones from radiographs. The objective was to compare DXR-BMD and DXR-MCI between healthy individuals and patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and verify the sensitivity and specificity of this technique for the identification of cortical hand bone loss as an additional diagnostic approach in RA. 618 patients were enrolled and divided into two groups: those with RA ( n  = 309) and a healthy control group ( n  = 309) as a reference database. DXR-BMD and the DXR-MCI were measured by DXR using hand radiographs. The severity of RA was evaluated by the modified Larsen score. Mean values for DXR-BMD and DXR-MCI in RA patients were significantly lower compared to healthy subjects (−20.7 and −21.1 %, respectively). Depending on the severity of RA-related joint damage, DXR-BMD revealed a significant reduction of –28.1 % and DXR-MCI –28.2 %, comparing score 1 and score 5 of the modified Larsen score. Both DXR-BMD and DXR-MCI had a high sensitivity (DXR-BMD 91 %, DXR-MCI 87 %) and a moderate specificity (DXR-BMD 47 %, DXR-MCI 49 %) to identify RA-related cortical hand bone loss. The DXR technique seems to be able to quantify RA-related periarticular bone loss as a characteristic feature in the course of RA. Consequently, periarticular osteoporosis seems to function as a reliable diagnostic approach comparable to erosions and joint space narrowing in the diagnosis of RA and as a surrogate marker for the progression of bone loss in RA.
ISSN:0914-8779
1435-5604
DOI:10.1007/s00774-016-0741-3