Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2827875 Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeTo achieve minimal inter-observer variability in assessment of spleen and liver volume changes using a novel MRI reading method in the context of a phase III clinical trial of a new therapy for Gaucher disease.Materials and methodsAbdominal MRI examinations at screening and after 6 and 9 months' exposure to a novel plant-cell-derived recombinant enzyme, taliglucerase alfa, were taken in 31 patients with Gaucher disease and at least 8-fold greater than expected splenomegaly. Transverse T2, T1, and in/out-of-phase, and coronal T1 sequences were performed using standardized settings across 11 sites globally. Spleen and liver volumes were semi-automatically delineated using an automatic segmentation algorithm followed by manual correction by experienced technologists using advanced editing tools. Data of all randomized patients were then submitted for efficacy evaluation to two independent experts blinded to time-point and treatment.ResultsMean (± SD) percent variability over all time-points was 0.30% ± 0.46% for spleen and 0.53% ± 0.69% for liver using 178 spleen and liver volumes measured twice. Adjudication due to ≥ 5% variability between observers was not required.ConclusionThe measurement method was found to be precise in monitoring spleen and liver volume changes over time, with a much lower variability than traditional manual methods, supporting the accuracy of the results. Given the observed minimal variability rates among multiple readers, a single read of each volume would be sufficient.

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