Rothschild Adolphe Ophthalmological Foundation
Inflammatory optic neuropathy (optic neuritis) is an acute condition that can affect the optic nerve along its entire course. It is a rare event, with a prevalence of up to 5 cases per 100,000 people per year, predominantly affecting young individuals (18-50 years old), primarily Caucasian and female. The causes of optic neuropathy are diverse, with the most common being multiple sclerosis, which is the revealing condition in nearly 30% of cases. MRI is an integral part of the initial assessment of optic neuritis, in conjunction with clinical examination, laboratory tests, and OCT (optical coherence tomography). It plays a crucial role in the acute management of this condition, particularly by guiding the etiological diagnosis and helping adapt the therapeutic approach accordingly. The establishment of objective and reliable MRI prognostic markers could allow for more precise immediate therapeutic adjustments, thereby improving the prognosis of this potentially severe and debilitating disease, whose treatment itself is not without risks. Indeed, determining the appropriate corticosteroid dose and deciding whether to combine it with other treatments remains a current clinical challenge. Despite various publications, MRI prognostic criteria for short- and long-term outcomes of optic neuritis remain unclear. Recent studies using radiomics have shown promising results, but these rely on limited sample sizes. New investigative methods are currently under development in the field of medical imaging, particularly "quantitative MRI." This approach enables effective analysis through mapping techniques, which generate numerical values compared to predetermined references. For instance: T1 (or R1) mapping assesses fibrosis and, indirectly, myelination, T2 (or R2) mapping evaluates edema. To our knowledge, this approach has never been studied for the optic nerve. More recently, the emergence of synthetic imaging has made it possible to generate the previously mentioned R1/R2 maps, along with more conventional weighted images (T1, T2, FLAIR, DP), from a single MRI sequence (2D spin-echo sequence). This sequence provides quantitative values while maintaining a short acquisition time (\~5 minutes), which is essential in ophthalmologic imaging, where motion artifacts are frequent. The goal of this study is to identify prognostic criteria for the evolution of optic neuritis using synthetic quantitative MRI sequences, in the form of threshold numerical values.
Optic Neuritis
MRI sequence
Study Type : | OBSERVATIONAL |
Estimated Enrollment : | 100 participants |
Official Title : | Evaluation of Optic Neuritis Using Synthetic Quantitative MRI |
Actual Study Start Date : | 2025-06 |
Estimated Primary Completion Date : | 2027-11 |
Estimated Study Completion Date : | 2027-11 |
Information not available for Arms and Intervention/treatment
Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years |
Sexes Eligible for Study: | ALL |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: |
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