Imaging of Spondylodiscitis: An Update

Spondylodiscitis is an infection of the vertebral body and/or intervertebral disc, which can also involve the epidural space, posterior elements, and paraspinal soft tissues. Due to high morbidity and mortality, prompt diagnosis and treatment of spondylodiscitis is critical. However, diagnosis can be challenging due to nonspecific signs and symptoms. Magnetic resonance imaging with and without contrast is the imaging modality of choice due to high sensitivity and specificity. Intravenous administration of gadolinium contrast can better demonstrate the extent of soft tissue and bone abscesses. However, magnetic resonance imaging is less useful in the evaluation of treatment response. When magnetic resonance imaging cannot be performed or is not diagnostic, radionuclide imaging is a useful alternative. Although bone scintigraphy frequently is used as a screening test, false negative results can occur early in the course of the infection and in the elderly. This test is not useful for detecting the soft tissue infections that often accompany or mimic spondylodiscitis. Gallium-67 citrate improves the specificity of the bone scan, can detect infection earlier than the bone scan, may be more sensitive, especially in elderly patients, and identifies accompanying soft tissue infection. Performing SPECT and SPECT/CT improve accuracy. The 2-3 day delay between radiopharmaceutical administration, poor image quality, and relatively high patient radiation dose are significant disadvantages of gallium-67. Furthermore gallium-67 is no longer as readily available as it once was. 18F-FDG imaging is the radionuclide test of choice for spondylodiscitis. The procedure, completed in one day, is sensitive, has a high negative predictive value, and reliably differentiates degenerative from infectious vertebral body end-plate abnormalities. 18F-FDG has outperformed bone and gallium-67 imaging in comparative studies. 18F-FDG may be able to provide an objective means for monitoring response to treatment. The potential of other agents for diagnosing spondylodiscitis has been studied. Although indium-111biotin accurately diagnoses spondylodiscitis, this radiopharmaceutical has never been commercially available. Gallium-68 citrate and 99mTc-radiolabeled antimicrobial peptides have been investigated, but their role in the diagnosis of spondylodiscitis has not been established. Labeled leukocyte scintigraphy has no role in the diagnosis of spondylodiscitis.

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