Siba P Raychaudhuri, Yasser G Abdelhafez, Dario F Mazza, Smriti K Raychaudhuri, Simon R Cherry, Lorenzo Nardo, Ramsey D Badawi, Abhijit J Chaudhari
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: To test the hypothesis that recently-developed total body-positron emission tomography (TB-PET) imaging with integrated computed tomography (CT) will enable low-dose, quantitative, domain-specific evaluation of the total inflammatory burden of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and associate with established outcome measures of the clinical domains of PsA.
Methods: Seventy-one adult participants (40 with PsA, 16 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and 15 with osteoarthritis (OA)) underwent 20-min TB-PET/CT scans using [18F]FDG, a glucose analogue radiotracer. [18F]FDG uptake was assessed qualitatively and quantitatively. Rheumatological examinations were performed prior to the scan. For both evaluations, domain-specific assessments included 68 joints, 6 entheses, 20 nails, axial disease and dactylitis.
Results: [18F]FDG PET uptake consistent with joint involvement and enthesitis was noted in 100% of participants with PsA. Other features included nail matrix pathology (53%), spinal involvement (60%), active sacroiliitis (13%) and dactylitis (10%). Patterns of [18F]FDG uptake in PsA differed from those in participants with RA or OA. There was a high concordance between TB-PET measures and the domain-specific assessments of the joint (75%), entheseal (79%) and nail (65%) pathology. TB-PET was positive for an additional 15% of joints, 20% of entheses and 13% of nails that were negative on clinical assessments.
Conclusion: TB-PET/CT identified inflammatory pathologies characteristic to all clinical domains of PsA and thus provided an in vivo evaluation of systemic PsA inflammatory burden. This promising tool may further contribute to identifying pathologies that may be occult, provide biomarkers to diagnose and differentiate PsA at an early stage, and to monitor early treatment response.
期刊介绍:
Rheumatology strives to support research and discovery by publishing the highest quality original scientific papers with a focus on basic, clinical and translational research. The journal’s subject areas cover a wide range of paediatric and adult rheumatological conditions from an international perspective. It is an official journal of the British Society for Rheumatology, published by Oxford University Press.
Rheumatology publishes original articles, reviews, editorials, guidelines, concise reports, meta-analyses, original case reports, clinical vignettes, letters and matters arising from published material. The journal takes pride in serving the global rheumatology community, with a focus on high societal impact in the form of podcasts, videos and extended social media presence, and utilizing metrics such as Altmetric. Keep up to date by following the journal on Twitter @RheumJnl.