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Clinical Trial Summary

Brucella spondylitis, an infectious spinal disease caused by the invasion of Brucella bacteria into the body. Its diagnosis relies mainly on laboratory and imaging tests. Due to the limited diagnostic ability of X-ray and CT for Brucella spondylitis, MRI has become the main diagnostic tool. In recent years, functional magnetic resonance technology has demonstrated great advantages in the diagnosis and therapeutic evaluation of brucellosis spondylitis, which can provide pathophysiologic information about the disease and is also a noninvasive and noninvasive diagnostic tool with a broader application prospect. Radiomics, an emerging approach, has also shown better diagnostic efficacy for this disease.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators will incorporate 100 confirmed cases of Brucella spondylitis (BS) patients diagnosed at Affiliated Hospital of Inner Mongolia Medical University. The patients receive routine scan with a Siemens Skyra 3.0T MRI scanner and the investigators collect clinical data and blood test results from the patients.The investigators segment the affected vertebral bodies by ITK-SNAP software on STIR images to create three-dimensional regions of interest. Then use Onekey software to extract radiomics features from the affected vertebral bodies. Employed t-tests and Lasso regression to select radiomics features. Then separately use radiomics features and combining it with clinical information to build random vector machine(SVM) and random forest(RF) models . All the models are constructed in the training set and their performance are evaluated on the validation set. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06220500
Study type Observational
Source The Affiliated Hospital of Inner Mongolia Medical University
Contact Peng fei Qiao, MD
Phone 15904718239
Email 24853170@qq.com
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date January 1, 2023
Completion date December 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT02809625 - Application of DCE-MRI in the Diagnosis of Brucellar Spondylitis