# Can Short Tau Inversion Recovery (STIR) Imaging Be Used as a Stand-Alone Sequence To Assess a Perianal Fistulous Tract on MRI? A Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing STIR and T1-Post Contrast Imaging

**Authors:** Armeen Ahmad, Sudeep Roplekar, Anna Podlasek

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.52448 · 2024-01-17

## TL;DR

This study compares STIR and T1-post contrast MRI sequences for diagnosing perianal fistulas and finds that STIR could be used alone or in combination for accurate assessment.

## Contribution

The study evaluates STIR imaging as a potential stand-alone diagnostic tool for perianal fistulas, offering a simplified clinical approach.

## Key findings

- STIR imaging demonstrated high sensitivity and 100% specificity for identifying internal openings and tracts.
- Combining STIR with T1-post contrast improved diagnostic accuracy with near-perfect AUC values.
- Moderate to substantial agreement was found between radiological assessments and clinical diagnosis.

## Abstract

Introduction: Perianal fistulas demand precise preoperative assessment for optimal surgical outcomes. MRI, using Short Tau Inversion Recovery (STIR) and T1-post contrast sequences, plays a crucial role in this evaluation.This retrospective cohort study compared STIR imaging's diagnostic efficacy with T1-post contrast sequences in identifying perianal fistulous tracts. The study investigated whether STIR imaging could serve as the sole diagnostic sequence, simplifying clinical practice.

Methods: In a tertiary care hospital, 100 patients underwent pelvic MRI for suspected perianal fistulas. Radiologists independently evaluated STIR and T1-post contrast sequences for internal openings, tract extent, distinction, abscess presence, and tract type. Sensitivity, specificity, area under the curve (AUC), and Cohen's kappa analysis were used for diagnostic assessment.

Results: STIR imaging showed notable sensitivity (79.8-97.9%) and specificity (100%) for identifying internal openings and tracts. Combined with T1-post contrast, diagnostic accuracy improved significantly, with near-perfect AUC values. Kappa values indicated moderate to substantial agreement between radiological assessments and clinical diagnosis. The combined sequences achieved 100% sensitivity and specificity for tract visualization.

Conclusion: STIR imaging presents promise as a singular diagnostic tool for perianal fistulas, especially when combined with T1-post contrast sequences. While offering potential clinical diagnosis simplifications, further studies are warranted to validate its utility and ensure comprehensive diagnostic accuracy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Perianal Fistulous (MESH:D000694), abscess (MESH:D000038)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10871160/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10871160