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Lottspeich, Christian; Dechant, Claudia; Köhler, Anton; Tischler, Maximilian; Treitl, Karla Maria; Treitl, Marcus; Schulze-Koops, Hendrik; Hoffmann, Ulrich und Czihal, Michael (2019): Assessment of Disease Activity in Takayasu Arteritis: Potential Role of Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound. In: Ultraschall in der Medizin, Bd. 40, Nr. 5: S. 638-645

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Abstract

Purpose To assess the diagnostic value of intima media thickness measurements and contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) of the supraaortic arteries in the assessment of disease activity in Takayasu arteritis (TA). Materials and Methods Patients with TA and involvement of the carotid and/or subclavian/axillary arteries underwent CEUS imaging in addition to B-mode and color duplex ultrasound. The maximum IMT (mIMT) was measured and high-resolution CEUS of the most prominently thickened vessel segment was performed. Two blinded readers reviewed the CEUS movies, with semiquantitative assessment of microbubble enhancement of the arterial wall (grade 0: no or minimal;grade 1: moderate;grade 2: pronounced). Clinical symptoms, acute phase reactants, and established indices of clinical disease activity (NIH criteria, ITAS score) were recorded. Results 40 examinations in 17 patients were analyzed. According to clinical judgement, 27 and 13 cases were classified as clinically inactive and active, respectively. An mIMT-cutoff of > 2.7 mm identified active disease with a sensitivity and specificity of 69.2 % and 88.9 %, respectively (area under the curve 0.83). The interobserver agreement of CEUS analysis was substantial (Cohen's kappa 0.76). By consensus reading, 17, 15, and 8 cases were classified as uptake grade 0, grade 1 and grade 2, respectively. Grade 0 uptake was exclusively present in 17 clinically inactive patients. Grade 1 uptake was seen in 10 patients with clinically inactive disease and 5 patients with clinically active disease. Grade 2 uptake was exclusively present in 8 patients with active disease. Conclusion Both sonographic IMT measurements and high-resolution CEUS are promising in the ad-hoc assessment of disease activity in patients with TA.

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