Assessment of bone synthetic activity in inflammatory lesions and syndesmophytes in patients with ankylosing spondylitis: the potential role of 18F-fluoride positron emission tomography-magnetic resonance imaging.

2015 
Abstract 18F-fluoride uptake represents active osteoblastic bone synthesis. We assessed bone synthetic activity in inflammatory lesions and syndesmophytes in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) using 18F-fluoride positron emission tomography-magnetic resonance imaging (PET-MRI, Philips Healthcare, Cleveland, OH, USA) and x-ray. All images of 12 AS patients were recorded with the presence or absence of increased 18F-fluoride uptake lesions on PET, acute (type A) or advanced (type B) corner inflammatory lesions (CILs) on MRI, syndesmophytes on x-ray at the anterior vertebral corners. An increased 18F-fluoride uptake lesion was defined as an uptake which is greater than the uptake in the adjacent normal vertebral body. The association of a CIL or syndesmophyte with an increased 18F-fluoride uptake lesion was investigated by generalised linear latent mixed models analysis to adjust within-patient dependence for total numbers of vertebral corners. There were 67 type A CILs (12.1%), 37 type B CILs (6.7%) and 58 increased 18F-fluoride uptake lesion (10.4%) out of 552 vertebral corners and there were 57 syndesmophytes (19.8%) out of 288 vertebral corners. A type A CIL (OR=3.2, 95% CI=1.6-6.5, p=0.001), type B CIL (OR=59.9, 95% CI=23.5-151.5, p
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