# Impact of combining magnetic resonance images and radiographs on radiographic grading of sacroiliitis and classification in axial spondyloarthritis: a reliability study

**Authors:** Kemal Erol, Kevser Orhan, Işıl Yurdaışık, Salih Özgöçmen

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00296-025-05898-0 · Rheumatology International · 2025-05-26

## TL;DR

This study examines how combining MRI and radiographs affects the reliability of diagnosing sacroiliitis in axial spondyloarthritis, finding limited improvement in diagnostic accuracy.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the impact of combining MRI with radiographs on diagnostic reliability in axial spondyloarthritis classification.

## Key findings

- Combining MRI with radiographs did not significantly improve radiographic grading reliability.
- Reader confidence was higher with combined imaging, but agreement remained moderate.
- 10.2% of patients were reclassified during consensus sessions.

## Abstract

To investigate the reliability of sacroiliac radiographic grading based on the modified New York criteria, both through grading pelvic radiographs alone and in combination with sacroiliac magnetic resonance imaging and the influence of alone and multimodal interpretation on the categorization of radiographic and non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (r-axSpA and nr-axSpA). Radiographs of the SI joints from patients with axSpA were graded by two rheumatologists independently in two sessions (radiographs only and MRI + radiographs) and followed by consensus sessions with the participation of a radiologist. Overall, anteroposterior pelvic radiographs and T1 weighted MR scans of the sacroiliac joints from 138 patients with axSpA were eligible. Intra- and inter-reader reliability was fair to moderate for both techniques regardless of whether they were examined alone or in conjunction with MRI, however confidence levels of readers were relatively higher in the MRI + radiographs combined technique compared to radiographs only. Regarding the classification, both readers’ intra and inter reader agreements were moderate to substantial. The kappa values and agreement were notably higher for the combined reading technique. In the consensus sessions, 10.2% of patients were recategorized. Merging the information from MRI scans with pelvic radiographs yielded no notable enhancement in the accuracy of radiographic grading of SI joint. Categorizing axSpA as either radiographic or non-radiographic based on pelvic radiography falls short in reliability even after combining with MR images and may likely call for a more reliable definition, axSpA with or without structural changes, relying on more advanced imaging techniques than radiographs.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** sacroiliitis (MESH:D058566), axSpA (MESH:D000089183)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

4 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12106133/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12106133