PURPOSE: To summarize and compare the published data on
gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) angiography and color-guided
duplex ultrasonography (US) for the work-up for peripheral arterial
disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Studies published between January 1984 and
November 1998 were included if (a) gadolinium-enhanced MR angiography
and/or color-guided duplex US were performed for evaluation of arterial
stenoses and occlusions in the work-up for peripheral arterial disease of
the lower extremities, (b) conventional angiography was the reference
standard, and (c) absolute numbers of true-positive, false-negative,
true-negative, and false-positive results were available or derivable.
RESULTS: With a random effects model, pooled sensitivity for MR
angiography (97.5% [95% CI: 95.7%, 99.3%]) was higher than that for duplex
US (87.6% [95% CI: 84.4%, 90.8%]). Pooled specificities were similar:
96.2% (95% CI: 94.4%, 97.9%) for MR angiography and 94.7% (95% CI: 93.2%,
96.2%) for duplex US. Summary receiver operating characteristic analysis
demonstrated better discriminatory power for MR angiography than for
duplex US. Regression coefficients for MR angiography versus US were 1.67
(95% CI: -0.23, 3.56) with adjustment for covariates, 2.11 (95% CI: 0.12,
4.09) without such adjustment, and 1.73 (95% CI: 0.44, 3.02) with a random
effects model. CONCLUSION: Gadolinium-enhanced MR angiography has better
discriminatory power than does color-guided duplex US and is a highly
sensitive and specific method, as compared with conventional angiography,
for the work-up for peripheral arterial disease