Published in:
01-05-2019 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | Gastrointestinal
Ability of DWI to characterize bowel fibrosis depends on the degree of bowel inflammation
Authors:
Xue-hua Li, Ren Mao, Si-yun Huang, Zhuang-nian Fang, Bao-Lan Lu, Jin-jiang Lin, Shan-shan Xiong, Min-hu Chen, Zi-ping Li, Can-hui Sun, Shi-Ting Feng
Published in:
European Radiology
|
Issue 5/2019
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Abstract
Objectives
Although diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is reported to be accurate in detecting bowel inflammation in Crohn’s disease (CD), its ability to assess bowel fibrosis remains unclear. This study assessed the role of DWI in the characterization of bowel fibrosis using surgical histopathology as the reference standard.
Methods
Abdominal DWI was performed before elective surgery in 30 consecutive patients with CD. The apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) in pathologic bowel walls were calculated. Region-by-region correlations between DWI and the surgical specimens were performed to determine the histologic degrees of bowel fibrosis and inflammation.
Results
ADCs correlated negatively with bowel inflammation (r = − 0.499, p < 0.001) and fibrosis (r = − 0.464, p < 0.001) in 90 specimens; the ADCs in regions of nonfibrosis and mild fibrosis were significantly higher than those in regions of moderate–severe fibrosis (p = 0.008). However, there was a significant correlation between the ADCs and bowel fibrosis (r = − 0.641, p = 0.001) in mildly inflamed segments but not in moderately (r = − 0.274, p = 0.255) or severely (r = − 0.225, p = 0.120) inflamed segments. In the mildly inflamed segments, the ADCs had good accuracy with an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.867 (p = 0.004) for distinguishing nonfibrosis and mild fibrosis from moderate–severe fibrosis.
Conclusions
ADC can be used to assess bowel inflammation in patients with CD. However, it only enables the accurate detection of the degree of bowel fibrosis in mildly inflamed bowel walls. Therefore, caution is advised when using ADC to predict the degree of intestinal fibrosis.
Key Points
• Diffusion-weighted imaging was used to assess bowel inflammation in patients with Crohn’s disease.
• The ability of diffusion-weighted imaging to evaluate bowel fibrosis decreased with increasing bowel inflammation.
• Diffusion-weighted imaging enabled accurate detection of the degree of fibrosis only in mildly inflamed bowel walls.