What will change clinical practice?
However, retrospective studies aren’t enough to change international diagnostic guidelines and clinical practice. Dr. Sati is part of a group of investigators from the North American Imaging in MS (NAIMS) Cooperative that is conducting a large prospective diagnostic study (CAVS-MS) with a $7.2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, which is currently recruiting 400 patients being evaluated for MS. The MRI protocol will use the optimized T2* EPI/FLAIR* techniques developed by Dr. Sati on 3-T scanners. “It’s a twofold goal: First the evaluation of the diagnostic power of the central vein sign in a real-world cohort, and then the validation of the advanced MRI technology that we’re developing to image the central vein sign clinically,” said Dr. Sati.
Neurologists generally are becoming more aware of these techniques, according to Dr. Patel, but they aren’t yet widely used outside of research settings.
“We haven’t collected enough evidence to really warrant wide implementation. I suspect that that’s one of the major reasons why it is that we don’t see this deployed more widely. I think there’ll be a bit of time before this is integrated to the standard sequences that are done for evaluation of multiple sclerosis,” said Dr. Patel.
The technique must contend with comorbid factors, especially vascular comorbidities such as hypertension, diabetes, or high cholesterol, that can cause white matter hyperintensities as individuals age. “This can create difficulties with using this procedure, because if you have small vessel disease at the same time you have MS, you have much more T2 lesion volume. It becomes a little bit more difficult to suss out whether the person has MS. So there’s a little bit of work that needs to be done along those lines as well,” said Dr. Patel.
With more research, the technology has the potential to improve MS diagnosis, both among community neurologists and even among specialists, according to Dr. Patel. “There are definitely cases that are rather ambiguous that even though they present at a major academic center, it’s sometimes very difficult for us to determine as to whether the person has multiple sclerosis or not. And this sort of technique can potentially help us in distinguishing those cases. Sometimes even after they see folks at tertiary centers, folks still don’t have a definitive diagnosis,” said Dr. Patel.
Dr. Sati and Dr. Patel have no relevant financial disclosures.