| Literature DB >> 35402253 |
Amrita Guha1,2, Antariksh Vijan1, Ujjwal Agarwal1, Jayant Sastri Goda2,3, Abhishek Mahajan1, Nitin Shetty1,2, Navin Khattry2,4.
Abstract
Imaging plays a vital role in the diagnosis, response assessment, and follow-up of patients with plasma cell bone disease. The radiologic diagnostic paradigm has thus far evolved with developing technology and availability of better imaging platforms; however, the skewed availability of these imaging modalities in developed vis-à-vis the developing countries along with the lack of uniformity in reporting has led to a consensus on the imaging criteria for diagnosing and response assessment in plasma cell dyscrasia. Therefore, it is imperative for not only the radiologists but also the treating oncologist to be aware of the criteria and appropriate imaging modality to be used in accordance with the clinical question. The review will allow the treating oncologist to answer the following questions on the diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive abilities of various imaging modalities for plasma cell dyscrasia: a) What lesions can look like multiple myeloma (MM) but are not?; b) Does the patient have MM? To diagnose MM in a high-risk SMM patient with clinical suspicion, which modality should be used and why?; c) Is the patient responding to therapy on follow-up imaging once treatment is initiated?; d) To interpret commonly seen complications post-therapy, when is it a disease and when is the expected sequel to treatment? Fractures, red marrow reconversion?; and e) When is the appropriate time to flag a patient for further workup when interpreting MRI spine done for back pain in the elderly? How do we differentiate between commonly seen osteoporosis-related degenerative spine versus marrow infiltrative disorder?Entities:
Keywords: PET/CT; POEMS syndrome; computed tomography; low-dose CT; multiple myeloma; whole-body MRI
Year: 2022 PMID: 35402253 PMCID: PMC8987930 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.825394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Summary of the current International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) diagnostic criteria (2019 consensus).
| Summary of IMWG 2019 criteria for the diagnosis of plasma cell dyscrasias | ||
|---|---|---|
| Multiple myeloma (MM) | Smouldering myeloma (SMM) | Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) |
| Clonal bone marrow plasma cells ≥10%, | Clonal bone marrow plasma cells | Clonal bone marrow plasma cells |
| Colloquially referred to as the “SLiM CRAB”: | Serum M protein | |
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Hypercalcemia
| Absence of | Absence of |
Figure 1Simplified graphic demonstrating the pathophysiology of multiple myeloma with emphasis on the RANK (receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-β)–RANK ligand–OPG (osteoprotegerin) axis. The steps in the molecular pathogenesis that serve as modulatory checkpoints for therapeutic agents have been numbered from 1 to 4 and represent targets for the following pharmacologic agents: 1—anti-neoplastic drugs (chemotherapeutic agents); 2—RANK ligand inhibitors, such as denosumab; 3—osteoclast inhibitors, such as bisphosphonates; 4—proteasome inhibitors, such as bortezomib, regulate cellular trafficking and osteocyte viability.
Figure 2(1) A 45-year-old woman presented with L2 vertebral compression fracture as demonstrated in the lateral radiograph of the spine in image (A). Blood investigations showed a positive M band, with elevated creatinine. Chest radiograph [image (B)] shows an ill-defined opacity in right midzone. The patient underwent a whole-body low-dose CT scan (WBLDCT), which revealed a lytic lesion with soft tissue component involving the anterior shaft of the right fourth rib [arrow, image (C)], which appeared consolidation-like on the radiograph. Image (D) the “rain-drop skull” appearance is seen with multiple variable-sized lytic lesions showing non-sclerotic borders. Image (E) a large lytic lesion with associated soft tissue component is seen involving the mastoid temporal bone on the right side (arrow). Image (F) an expansile lesion with focal areas of cortical breech is seen involving the left ilium with few other osteolytic foci scattered in the rest of the pelvis. The utility of WBLDCT lies in its ability in detecting as well as characterizing radiographically and clinically occult lesions such as the one involving the right temporal bone and the left ilium which may warrant locoregional therapy. (2) Images (A–C) show coronal reformatted images of both femora acquired on a WBLDCT study in a suspected case of myeloma. Note the intramedullary fat replacing hyperdense deposits best appreciated on soft tissue window settings with contrast adjustment. While these are prominent on routine soft tissue window settings as well [image (B)], one would entirely miss these deposits if only bone window settings were examined [image (A)]. Image (D) is a coronal reformatted MIP image from a subsequent PET/CT study that confirms the presence of these medullary deposits. Thus, careful evaluation of medullary cavities on soft tissue window settings with apt contrast adjustment can prove invaluable.
Figure 3Simplified graphic representation of the imaging algorithm for initial evaluation of various plasma cell disorders adapted from the 2019 IMWG Consensus. MGUS, monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance; SM, smoldering multiple myeloma; MM, multiple myeloma; FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose. Overall, whole-body CT is the first imaging choice to exclude osteolytic lesions. PET/CT can be used in place of whole-body CT for suspected multiple myeloma, and it can be used in place of whole-body MRI if the MRI procedure is not feasible (or otherwise contraindicated). For a more detailed and accurate description, readers are requested to refer to the IMWG guidelines.
Temporal evolution of the International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) recommendations.
| Year | Premise | Summary of key introductions | Key exclusions/future direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | CRAB | ||
| 2014 | The “SLiM CRAB”: introduction of myeloma biomarkers (myeloma-defining events, i.e., MDE) |
Addition of three specific biomarkers (MDEs), i.e., 1) clonal bone marrow plasma cell percentage ≥60%; 2) involved:uninvolved serum-free light chain ratio ≥100; 3) >1 focal lesion on MRI studies (>5 mm) Presence of even one of these MDEs in the absence of CRAB is sufficient for myeloma diagnosis Single 5-mm or larger osteolytic lesion seen at PET/CT, WBLD CT, or skeletal survey: CRAB |
Diffuse osteopenia and vertebral collapse no longer suffice for diagnosis Increased uptake on PET/CT alone is not adequate for the diagnosis of multiple myeloma; evidence of underlying osteolytic bone destruction is needed on the CT portion of the examination |
| 2019 | Guidelines on imaging modality according to disease stage. Detection of minimal residual disease |
Validation of the role of WBLDCT as a screening tool to look for osteolytic lesions and to rule out multiple myeloma Emphasis on using FDG PET for response assessment if done at baseline |
Unclear on the utility of functional MRI vs. PET/CT in response assessment—requires further validation |
Figure 4Image (A) sagittal CT image in bone window demonstrating vertebral compression fracture with >75% height reduction (arrow). Image (B) shows a lytic lesion involving the C7 vertebral body. MRI images confirm pathological L5 vertebral fracture with the concave posterior bulge of the vertebra, STIR hyperintensity seen in coronal STIR image of the lumbar spine [image (C)], T1 hypointensity [image (E)], and post-contrast enhancement [image (G)]. The lytic cervical vertebral lesion seen on CT in image (B), is well appreciated in images (D, F). Additionally, MRI reveals a variegated pattern with multiple punctate foci of altered signal intensity involving the marrow.
Figure 5Radiograph of the pelvis [image (A)] shows a large lytic lesion with associated soft tissue component involving the right iliac bone. Image (B) shows a coronal STIR image that further delineates the right iliac mass and additionally demonstrates other STIR hyperintense foci in the contralateral left hip as well as the right proximal femur. Coronal pre-contrast T1W [image (C)] and contrast-enhanced T1W [image (D)] series show intense post-contrast enhancement within the right iliac mass and multiple other enhancing marrow foci scattered in the pelvis and both femora. A dynamic contrast enhancement analysis [image (E)] revealed a type III kinetic curve demonstrating rapid enhancement and washout within the lesion. Additional MRI imaging of the spine shows multiple T1 hypointense [image (F)] marrow lesions that show intense post-contrast enhancement [arrows in image (G)]. Biopsy from the right iliac mass revealed plasma cell proliferation on histopathology, with overall findings consistent with multiple myeloma.
Summary of technique, principles, and utility of various imaging modalities for plasma cell disorders.
| Modality | Protocol | Indication | Principle of imaging | Findings | Advantages | Disadvantages | Recommendation |
| Radiography | Skeletal survey: AP and lateral views of the skull, chest, spine, PBH, long bones | Diagnosis and complication assessment | Proliferation of abnormal plasma cells creates a mechanical burden that compromises the skeleton by displacing and eroding bony trabecular tissue | Lytic areas of uniform size and endosteal scalloping in the skull, axial skeleton | • Available easily and commonly used modality across the world | • Difficulty in positioning patients with severe pain | Not recommended, except if no other modality available |
| Total body dose 1.7–2.4 mSv | Plasma cells produce an osteoclast stimulating factor-osteolytic lesions and also leads to inhibition of osteoblasts | Differentiator from metastases: predilection for sites such as mandible, clavicle, glenoid, vertebral body (rather than posterior elements) | |||||
| Diffuse osteopenia Vertebral collapse/fractures | |||||||
| Technetium bone scan | Diagnosis or follow-up | Not recommended | |||||
| Whole-body low-dose CT (WBLDCT) | 120 kV, 40–50 mAs, slice thickness 2 mm | Diagnosis and imaging complications: vertebral collapse/fractures | Same as radiography, only much more sensitive (can detect even 5% trabecular destruction) ( | Similar to X-rays—lytic lesions, diffuse osteopenia, endosteal scalloping, neoplastic and osteoporotic fractures, cortical disruption, and extraosseous involvement | • Good PPV 94% ( | • Poor NPV = 58% | Best screening tool—ESMO and EMN |
| No contrast needed | |||||||
| Hands overhead to reduce beam hardening on the spine | |||||||
| MRI spine | Sagittal T1-weighted, STIR; slice thickness 4 mm, 512 × 512 matrix size | Diagnosis or complication assessment | Marrow infiltration by abnormal cells and be detected before frank lytic lesions appear | Five patterns: apparently normal bone marrow, diffuse involvement, focal involvement, combined diffuse and focal involvement, and variegated, or salt and pepper. T1 most important sequence: to look for hypointense lesions replacing normal fatty marrow of vertebrae | • Excellent sensitivity and specificity: 68% to 100% and 83% to 100%, respectively ( | • 10% of patients have only appendicular involvement: false negative in these ( | Reasonable accuracy of 90% where WBMRI is not available ( |
| Whole-body MRI (WBMRI) | Coronal sequences T1-weighted, STIR, axial DW, 5 mm slice, 512 × 512 DWIBS axial | Diagnosis or complication assessment | Similar as above | Same as above. MM lesions appear as areas of increased diffusivity compared with low diffusion in normal background marrow | DWI most sensitive sequence, changes in T1 occur later ( | • Long time, technical expertise needed | Gold standard ( |
| Sensitivity (68% to 100%) and specificity (83% to 100%) ( | |||||||
| Positron emission tomography (PET/CT) | Intravenous dose of about 13.7 mCI of 18F-FDG; PET images from the skull to the femora, including the upper limbs after a 1-h delay | Treatment response assessment Diagnosis | Metabolically active tumor cells show active FDG uptake | Raised SUV with underlying lytic lesion | • Functional plus morphological information | • Less sensitive than MRI especially in patients with diffuse marrow involvement (26) | Gold standard for response assessment ( |
| Total body dose of about 21.64 ± 5.20 mSv |
Figure 6MRI patterns of marrow involvement in multiple myeloma showing normal, focal, and diffuse patterns from left to right.
Figure 7Graphic representation of the Dixon method. Image (A) is the in-phase image, akin to a regular T1-weighted image where marrow fat is hyperintense and any marrow replacing lesion (or red marrow) would be seen as T1 intermediate to hypointense signal intensity. Image (B) shows the out-of-phase sequence wherein all voxels containing microscopic fat would show a dropout of signal and appear hypointense with India ink artifacts at water–fat interfaces. Thus, lesions that do not suppress this sequence are non-fat-containing. Images (C, D) show fat-only and water-only sequences, respectively, which further selectively demonstrate fat and non-fat signal intensities, respectively. The water-only sequence brings about the most selective fat suppression and shows the greatest lesion conspicuity.
Summary of various upcoming radiotracer-based molecular imaging techniques.
| Radiotracer | Principle | Utility in comparison with 18F-FDG | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18F/11C Choline | Choline: substrate for cell membrane biosynthesis, hence increased uptake by proliferating cells with high membrane turnover |
Higher detection of focal lesions compared with 18F-FDG |
Masking of marrow/liver lesions—owing to physiologically raised choline uptake Very short half-life: need for on-site cyclotron Radiotracer synthesis technically challenging |
| 11C Acetate | Acetate: precursor to acetyl-CoA synthase (lipid synthesis key enzyme). Proliferating plasma cells—increased lipid synthesis; thus, increased uptake |
Higher detection rate for both diffuse and focal myeloma lesions than 18F-FDG Role in response assessment: significant SUVmax differences noted in pre- and post-therapy states |
Radiotracer synthesis technically challenging Need for on-site cyclotron |
| 11C Methionine | Methionine: amino acid PET tracer; rapidly incorporated by proliferating plasma cells into immunoglobulins |
Higher detection of focal and diffuse lesions compared with 18F-FDG Better detection of skull lesions (low physiological uptake by the brain) |
Masking of marrow/liver lesions—owing to physiologically raised methionine uptake Radiotracer synthesis technically challenging |
| 68Ga-Pentixafor | 68Ga-Pentixafor: strongly binds chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4), a G-protein-coupled chemokine receptor. This receptor is upregulated in MM and mediates various steps in MM pathogenesis |
Theragnostic potential May have better detection rates than 18F-FDG Prognostic biomarker: as it correlates with end-organ damage and other lab parameters |
Radiotracer synthesis technically challenging |
| 89Zr-Daratumumab | Daratumumab: anti-CD38 monoclonal antibody. CD38—overexpressed by myeloma cells |
Early stages of development Theragnostic role |
Phase I trial—limited data |
| 18F-Sodium fluoride (18F-NaF) | NaF: marker of osteoblastic activity |
Poor sensitivity owing to the suppressed osteoblastic action in MM Poor specificity—uptake in any focus of bone reconstruction |
Poor detection rate |
| 18F-Fluorothymidine (18F-FLT) | Fluorothymidine: thymidine kinase acts upon this substrate to produce high-energy phosphates that are trapped intracellularly. High thymidine kinase activity in rapidly proliferating cells responsible for increased uptake |
Inferior to FDG PET in the detection of lesions |
Poor detection rate |
Structured reporting format in a case of multiple myeloma.
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| Pattern of predominant narrow infiltration (Normal/focal, focal on diffuse, salt pepper] |
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MY-RADS response assessment categories.
| 1 | Response; highly likely |
Unequivocal decrease in size and number of lesions/soft tissue component Return of fat in vertebra or within/around lesions ADC >1,400 µm2/s ≥40% increase in ADC from baseline with decrease in |
| 2 | Response; likely |
Small decrease in size/number of focal lesions Increase in ADC from ≤1,000 to <1,400 µm2/s >25% but <40% increase in ADC from baseline |
| 3 | Stable disease | No obvious change |
| 4 | Progression; likely |
Equivocal new lesions Decreasing ADC Re-emergence of previously disappeared lesions |
| 5 | Progression; highly likely |
New-onset pathological critical fracture(s)/cord compression requiring radiation therapy/surgery Unequivocal new focal/diffuse infiltration Unequivocal increase in number/size of focal lesions Evolution of focal lesions to diffuse neoplastic pattern Appearance/increasing soft tissue associated with bone disease New lesions/regions of high |
For prognostication, >7 lesions worse prognosis.
Differential diagnosis for imaging features of various plasma cell dyscrasias.
| Differentials to consider for multifocal marrow Lesions | Differentials to consider for skull lesions | Differentials to consider for a solitary plasmacytoma |
|---|---|---|
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Posterior vertebral element involvement (e.g., pedicles) favors metastases. Uncommon with myeloma due to paucity of red marrow Non-uniformity of lesions favors metastases Mandibular involvement—favors myeloma Presence of “mini-brain” sign—favors myeloma (thick bony struts radiating inwards) |
Metastases usually are of varying sizes, with poor zone of transition Myeloma lesions are sharp punched out defects that tend to be more uniform in size Endosteal scalloping classic for myeloma | Expansile metastases “ For example in thyroid cancer, renal cell carcinoma, and choriocarcinoma |
| Other Lymphoma Amyloidosis Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia—may have associated bone infarcts (due to the hyperviscosity) |
Involve inner table and diploae, sometimes reaching up to the outer cortex CSF density/intensity Smoothly marginated | Other causes of “soap-bubble” appearance Giant cell tumor Brown’s tumor—when history and other features of secondary hyperparathyroidism are present in the setting of CKD |
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Exclusively affects the vertebral body without any associated soft tissue Concave posterior wall, with altered marrow signal restricted to vertebral body |
Histiocytosis, for example LCH–calvarial lesions showing “bevelled” edges and other features such as pulmonary cysts Renal osteodystrophy/hyperparathyroidism—salt-and-pepper skull |
Figure 8(1) Panel of images demonstrating the classic “mini-brain” appearance in a case of plasmacytoma on therapy with multiple hypointense struts seen emanating from the L2 vertebral body lesion seen on axial computed tomography (CT) [image (A)], axial STIR [image (B)], axial T1WI [image (C)], and axial T2WI [image (D)]. Note the central sclerosis representing post-therapy changes. The non-sclerotic component shows intense post-contrast enhancement with retropulsion as seen in pre-contrast sagittal T1W [image (E)] and post-contrast sagittal images [image (F)]. (2) Solitary plasmacytoma mimicking a soap-bubble lesion. A large expansile multilobulated lesion is seen involving the proximal radius on the radiograph [image (A)]. Coronal T2WI MRI image shows an intermediate T2 signal intensity lesion [image (B)] which shows post-contrast enhancement [image (C)]. Differentials of such a radiologic appearance include the giant cell tumor and blowout metastases. (3) Expansile lesion involving the clivus with T2 iso- to hypointense signal intensity [image (A)], T1 isointense signal intensity [image B], and intense post-contrast enhancement [image (C)]. The lack of T2 hyperintensity makes both chordoma and chondrosarcoma (lesions classically affecting the clivus) highly unlikely. Endonasal sampling revealed features of plasma cell neoplasm.