Literature DB >> 34242226

Relevance of diffusion-weighted imaging with background body signal suppression for staging, prognosis, morphology, treatment response, and apparent diffusion coefficient in plasma-cell neoplasms: A single-center, retrospective study.

Akiko Yamada1, Yoichi Araki2, Yuko Tanaka1, Shunsuke Otsuki1, Arisa Yamada1, Mitsuru Moriyama1, Seiichiro Katagiri1, Tamiko Suguro1, Michiyo Asano1, Seiichiro Yoshizawa1, Daigo Akahane1, Nahoko Furuya1, Hiroaki Fujimoto1, Seiichi Okabe1, Moritaka Gotoh1, Kunihito Suzuki2, Kazuhiro Saito2, Akihiko Gotoh1.   

Abstract

Accurate staging and evaluation of therapeutic effects are important in managing plasma-cell neoplasms. Diffusion-weighted imaging with body signal suppression magnetic resonance imaging (DWIBS-MRI) allows for acquisition of whole-body volumetric data without radiation exposure. This study aimed to investigate the usefulness of DWIBS-MRI in plasma-cell neoplasms. We retrospectively analyzed 29 and 8 Japanese patients with multiple myeloma and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance, respectively, who underwent DWIBS-MRI. We conducted a histogram analysis of apparent diffusion coefficient values. The correlations between each histogram parameter and staging, cell maturation, prognosis, and treatment response were evaluated. We found that the apparent diffusion coefficient values in patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance were lower than those in patients with multiple myeloma. Pretreatment apparent diffusion coefficient values of immature myeloma were lower than those of mature myeloma. Moreover, these values decreased in proportion to stage progression in Durie-Salmon classification system but showed no significant correlation with other staging systems or prognosis. Patients were stratified as responder, stable, and non-responder based on the International Myeloma Working Group criteria. The magnitude of changes in apparent diffusion coefficients differed significantly between responders and non-responders (0.154 ± 0.386 ×10-3 mm2/s vs. -0.307 ± 0.424 ×10-3 mm2/s, p = 0.003). Although its usefulness has yet to be established, DWIBS-MRI combined with apparent diffusion coefficient measurement allowed for excellent response evaluation in patients with multiple myeloma. Furthermore, apparent diffusion coefficient analysis using DWIBS-MRI may be useful in predicting cell maturation and total tumor volume.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34242226     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  1 in total

1.  Role of whole-body diffusion-weighted imaging in evaluation of multiple myeloma.

Authors:  Jiping Wang; Bei Zhang; Rongkui Zhang; Li Zhang; Wenyan Jiang; Yaqiu Jiang
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-09-03       Impact factor: 1.817

  1 in total

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