Currently, there is no official recommendations for the respiratory surveillance of patients with PID.However, it is recommended to perform a chest CT scan each 5 years or before any significant therapeutic change. The methods of surveillance need to meet two contradictory imperatives: * monitor frequently enough not to diagnose with delay an aggravation of bronchiectasis or interstitial pneumonitis, an infectious complication by a slowly growing pathogen such as a non-tuberculous mycobacterium, or lymphoid proliferation. * do not expose these often young patients to significant irradiation by a considerable number of scans during their life. In addition, some patients with PID have increased radiosensitivity without a safe irradiation threshold having been determined. To make thoses requirements effective, the solution is to combine radiological monitoring and absence of irradiation. Therefore, it makes sense to study whether chest scans can be replaced by MRI, non-irradiating imaging. But the question that needs to be answered is whether the information provided by the chest MRI is not inferior to that provided by the scanner. The objective of this study is to assess the ability of MRI performed with ultrashort echo time to analyze the extent and severity of bronchial and pulmonary parenchymal lesions during the follow-up of patients with primary immunodeficiency, comparing them to those of the chest CT scan.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
50
Pulmonary MRI based on a 1.5 T machine (Siemens VIDA) or a 3T machine (Siemens SOLA) without the use of contrast product according to a protocol based on a 3D-UTE sequence acquired in free breathing but with a respiratory synchronization system in association with weightings in T1 and T2.
Foch hospital
Suresnes, France
RECRUITINGTo assess the bronchial lesions
Analysis of the presence, the severity (cylindrical, varicose or cystic) and segmental distribution of bronchiectasis, 2. the presence and lobar distribution of hypoperfused pulmonary areas, and 3. the presence and lobar distribution of interstitial abnormality and pulmonary nodular lesions. Those three components will be independently identified by lung scanners and MRIs.
Time frame: 6 montths
To assess the parenchymal lesions
Analysis of the presence and lobar distribution of hypoperfused pulmonary areas
Time frame: 6 montths
To assess the MRI results versus the scanner results
To assess the reproducibility of MRI performed using a prototype 3D-UTE SPIRALVIBE sequence and CT scan to detect bronchial and pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities at the segmental, lobar or pulmonary scale, by two independent thoracic radiologists.
Time frame: 6 months
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