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POS1133 (2021)
RELIABILITY OF CONVENTIONAL RADIOGRAPHY OF THE KNEE FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF CHONDROCALCINOSIS: AN ANCILLARY STUDY OF THE OMERACT ULTRASOUND – CPPD GROUP
S. Sirotti1, F. Becce2, L. M. Sconfienza3, C. Pineda4, M. Gutierrez4, T. Serban5, D. Maccarter6, A. Adinolfi7, E. Naredo8, A. Scanu9, I. Möller10, P. Sarzi-Puttini1, A. Abhishek11, H. Choi12, N. Dalbeth13, S. Tedeschi14, M. A. D’agostino15, H. Keen16, L. Terslev17, A. Iagnocco18, G. Filippou1, on behalf of OMERACT Ultrasound working group, CPPD subgroup
1Sacco Hospital, Rheumatology Department, Milano, Italy
2Lausanne University Hospital, Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Lausanne, Switzerland
3University of Milan, Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Milano, Italy
4National Rehabilitation Institute, Division of Musculoskeletal and Rheumatic Diseases, Ciudad de México, Mexico
5Hospital La Colletta, Rheumatology Department, Arenzano, Italy
6North Valley Hospital, Rheumatology Department, Whitefish, United States of America
7Niguarda, Rheumatology Unit, Milan, Italy
8Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Department of Rheumatology and Joint and Bone Research Unit, Madrid, Spain
9University of Padua, Department of Medicine-DIMED, Rheumatology Unit, Padova, Italy
10Instituto Poal de Reumatologia, Rheumatology, Barcelona, Spain
11University of Nottingham, Academic Rheumatology, Nottingham, United Kingdom
12Massachusetts General Hospital, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology, Department of Medicine, Boston, United States of America
13The University of Auckland, Bone and Joint Research Group, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Auckland, New Zealand
14Brigham And Women’s Hospital, Division of Rheumatology, Inflammation and Immunity, Boston, United States of America
15Agostino Gemelli University Policlinic, Rheumatology Department, Roma, Italy
16The University of Western Australia, School of Medicine, Murdoch, Perth, Australia
17Rigshospitalet, Center for Rheumatology and Spine Diseases, København, Denmark
18University of Turin, Academic Rheumatology Centre, Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, Torino, Italy

Background: Conventional Radiography (CR) has been widely used in the assessment of knee chondrocalcinosis (CC) and is still considered one of the most important diagnostic methods for the diagnosis. However, there are no studies on the reliability of CR for CC.


Objectives: To assess the reliability of CR of the knee in the assessment of chondrocalcinosis (CC).


Methods: This is an ancillary study of the Criterion Validity of Ultrasound in Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition Disease (CPPD) study [1]. Consecutive patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) that were planned for total knee replacement surgery were enrolled in 4 centres from Romania, Italy, USA and Mexico. All patients underwent CR of the knees taken maximum 6 months before surgery, in posterior-anterior weight baring and lateral projections. DICOM files of the radiographs were retrieved, anonymised and read independently by two musculoskeletal radiologists with experience in microcrystalline arthropathies. Each reader performed a second evaluation 3 weeks after the first one to calculate the inter- and intra-reader agreement. For each patient a dichotomic score was assigned (absence/presence of CC) at the level of the medial and lateral menisci, tibiofemoral hyaline cartilage, quadriceps and patella tendons, synovial membrane/joint capsule. The definitions of the ACR/EULAR taskforce for identification of CPPD in conventional radiography were used in this study [paper in preparation]. According to these definitions CPPD in CR appears as “linear or punctate opacities in the region of fibro- or hyaline articular cartilage/synovial membrane or joint capsule/within tendons or entheses that are distinct from denser, nummular radio-opaque deposits due to basic calcium phosphate deposition”. Cohen’s kappa was used to calculate the agreement between the two readers.


Results: We enrolled 33 patients with knee OA (60.6% female, mean age 69yo ± 8). The kappa values of the inter-reader and intra-reader agreement in the various sites of the knee are indicated in Table 1 . Inter-reader agreement was substantial at the level of both menisci but only moderate or fair at the other sites of assessment. This had a negative impact on the overall evaluation of the knee joint that proved to be unreliable (k of 0.16 – none to slight agreement) if all anatomical structures are included for assessment, and moderately reliable (kappa 0.41) when both menisci and hyaline cartilage are considered. On the other hand, intra-reader kappa values were substantial or higher in all sites (except for synovial membrane/joint capsule for one reader). The striking difference of the intra-reader compared to the inter-reader kappa values, highlight a different interpretation and application of the definitions used for most of the sites with the exception of the menisci.

kappa values for intra- and inter-reader agreement. Values from 0.01–0.20 are considered as none to slight agreement, 0.21–0.40 as fair, 0.41– 0.60 as moderate, 0.61–0.80 as substantial, and 0.81–1.00 as almost perfect agreement.

Medial meniscus Lateral meniscus Hyaline cartilage Quadriceps tendon Patellar tendon Capsule/ synovia Menisci + cartilage Entire joint
Inter-reader 0.67 0.71 0.34 0.47 NA 0.37 0.40 0.17
Intra-reader 1 st assessor 0.67 0.90 0.84 0.65 NA (insufficient number of categories) 0.53 0.71 0.76
Intra-reader 2 nd assessor 1 0.80 1 1 1 0.91 0.86 0.94

Conclusion: CR has been extensively used for diagnosis of OA and CPPD. The results of our study raise some concerns on the reliability of CR in identification of CPPD. Assessment of calcium crystals at the menisci level should be used for identification of CC as other sites of the knee seem to present low reliability.


REFERENCES:

[1]Filippou G et al. Criterion validity of ultrasound in the identification of calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposits at the knee: an OMERACT ultrasound study. Ann Rheum Dis 2020. doi:10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-217998


Disclosure of Interests: None declared.


Citation: Ann Rheum Dis, volume 80, supplement 1, year 2021, page 846
Session: Crystal diseases, metabolic bone diseases other than osteoporosis (POSTERS only)