Background and aims: The aim of this study was to compare the accuracy and clinical impact of hybrid positron emission tomography [PET]/magnetic resonance-enterography [MR-E] and PET/computed tomography-enterography [CT-E] in patients with Crohn's disease [CD].
Methods: A total of 35 patients with symptomatic small-bowel CD who were scheduled to undergo operation were evaluated before operation by same-day PET/CT-E and PET/MR-E. PET/MR-E was also compared with MR-E alone. Imaging accuracy for detecting pathological sites and discriminating between fibrotic and inflammatory strictures was assessed. Treatment was adjusted according to imaging findings and change in medical/surgical strategy was also evaluated.
Results: PET/CT-E, PET/MR-E, and MR-E were equally accurate in detecting CD sites. PET/MR-E was more accurate in assessing extra-luminal disease [p = 0.002], which was associated with higher need for stoma [p = 0.022] and distant localisation [p = 0.002]. When the latter was observed, laparoscopy was started with hand-assisted device, reducing operative time [p = 0.022]. PET/MR-E was also more accurate in detecting a fibrotic component compared with PET/CT-E [p = 0.043] and with MR-E [p = 0.024]. Fibrosis was more frequently classified as inflammation with MR-E compared with PET/MR-E [p = 0.019]. Out of 8 patients with predominantly inflammatory CD who received medical treatment, 6 [75%] remained surgery free. Overall, 29 patients received surgery. At median follow-up of 9 [6-22] months, no recurrences occurred in either the medical or the surgical group.
Conclusions: Preoperative PET/MR-E imaging is highly accurate for assessing CD lesions before operation and contributed to clinical management of patients with small-bowel CD more often than PET/CT-E.
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; diagnosis; surgery; fibrosis; inflammation; magnetic resonance imaging; pathology.
Copyright © 2015 European Crohn’s and Colitis Organisation (ECCO). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.