| Literature DB >> 36010244 |
Alberto Stefano Tagliafico1,2, Clarissa Valle3,4, Pietro Andrea Bonaffini3,4, Ali Attieh2, Matteo Bauckneht1,2, Liliana Belgioia1,2, Bianca Bignotti2, Nicole Brunetti1,2, Alessandro Bonsignore1,2, Enrico Capaccio2, Sara De Giorgis1,2, Alessandro Garlaschi2, Silvia Morbelli1,2, Federica Rossi5, Lorenzo Torri6, Simone Caprioli2,7, Simona Tosto2, Michele Cea2,7, Alida Dominietto2.
Abstract
Objective: To assess the reliability of the myeloma spine and bone damage score (MSBDS) across multiple readers with different levels of expertise and from different institutions.Entities:
Keywords: bone; computed tomography; multiple myeloma; quantitative imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 36010244 PMCID: PMC9407006 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12081894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
MSBDS (Myeloma Spine and Bone Damage Score). Interpretation: High-risk: >10, requiring immediate surgical or radiation oncologist consultation. Medium risk: ≥5–10, possible instability and a medium risk of pathological fracture. Low-risk: <5. * Bone abnormalities not sufficient to give high-risk scores, if isolated. ** 1 point for every segment according to MY-RADS [13].
| Location | Points |
|---|---|
| Junctional Spine (C0-C2, C7-T2, T11-L1, L5-S1) | 3 |
| Mobile Spine (C3-C6, L2-L4) * only 1 point for semi-rigid (T3-T10) | 2 |
| Collapse/involvement >50% | 3 |
| Collapse <50% * | 2 |
| Posterolateral (facet, pedicle) involvement monolateral | 2 |
| Posterolateral (facet, pedicle) bilateral monolateral | 3 |
| Spinal Canal involvement | 5 |
| Trochanteric region focal lesions <10 mm | 2 |
| Femoral neck or entire trochanteric region | 5 |
| More than 2/3 of bone diameter | 3 |
| Focal lesion >5 mm at any site * | 1 |
| Diffuse Pattern | 1 ** |
Clinical data of the 104 MM patients included in the study. High-risk defines MM patients carrying HR features, including del17p, t(4;14) or t(14,16), according to the FISH analysis. International Staging System includes stage I-III based on beta2-microglobulin and albumin levels.
| Number | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients | 104 | 100 |
| Age (mean years) | 58 | |
| Age Standard Deviation | 8.1 | |
| Males | 62 | 59.6 |
| Females | 42 | 40.4 |
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| Normal | 72 | 69.2 |
| High-risk | 32 | 30.8 |
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| 71/104 | 68 | |
| Days before relapse (mean) | 1173 | |
| Days of follow-up (mean) | 1466 | |
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| Stage I | 48 | 46 |
| Stage II | 28 | 27 |
| Stage III | 28 | 27 |
Figure 1Scoring bone damage and instability: spectrum of findings. (A) Focal lytic lesions >5 mm in diameter located at the left sacrum (white arrows). In this case the MSBDS was 2 (1 + 1). (B) Single focal lytic lesion >5 mm in the vertebral body (white arrow) with no vertebral collapse (sagittal not shown). The adjacent smaller focal lytic lesion (green line) is <5 mm (no points in the MSBDS). In this case, the MSBDS was 1. (C) Large lytic lesion at the junctional spine (L5-S1) with cortical erosion, collapse/involvement >50%, posterolateral (facet, pedicle) involvement and more than 2/3 of bone diameter. In this case, the MSBDS was 11 (3 + 3 + 2 + 3): the lesion was considered “high-risk” and immediate surgical or radiation oncologist consultation was warranted. In this case, there was also possible spinal canal involvement. (D) Lytic lesion >5 mm (white arrow) at the junctional spine (thoracic spine) with collapse/involvement <50% and a small (small white arrow) focal lesion at the anterior arch of the right rib cage with extraosseous extension. In this case, the MSBDS was 6 (3 + 2 + 1): the lesion was considered “medium-risk” (5–10 with medium risk of pathologic fracture). (E) Large lytic lesion at the junctional spine (thoracic spine) with collapse/involvement >50%, posterolateral (facet, pedicle) involvement and more than 2/3 of bone diameter. In this case, the MSBDS was 11 (3 + 3 + 2 + 3): the lesion was considered “high-risk” and immediate surgical or radiation oncologist consultation was warranted. In this case, there is spinal canal involvement. (F) Lytic lesion at the left femoral neck (white arrow). This lesion alone warrants 5 points in the MSBDS: the lesion was considered “medium-risk”, although immediate fracture seems unlikely.
Figure 2Frequency of bone lesions in the web-based reliability assessment. In this graph, the distribution of the degree of pathological findings, according to the MSBDS, is presented. The range of the MSBDSs was between 1 and 18. Most lesions (21%) were small lesions with an MSBDS of 1.
Global inter- and intra-observer agreement among the 15 readers considering the MSBDS with scores below or equal to 6 points and scores above 6 points. K values are reported as weighed with linear weights.
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| MSBDS ≤ 6 points | 0.81 | 0.72–0.86 |
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| MSBDS ≥ 6 points | 0.94 | 0.91–0.98 |
Figure 3Scoring bone damage and instability: spectrum of findings with maximum disagreement among readers. Discrepancies with an MSBDS > 6. (A) Focal lytic lesions >5 mm in diameter located at the left sacrum (white arrow) with another small lesion in the sacrum near the sacroiliac joint. In this case, the MSBDS was 7 with a standard deviation of 4.9. (B) Single large focal lytic lesion >5 mm in the vertebral body (white arrow) with no vertebral collapse (sagittal not shown) but possible spinal canal infiltration. In this case, the MSBDS was 11 with a standard deviation of 5.3 due to difficulties in spinal canal assessment mainly by non-specialists. In these cases, a sub-specialized second reading should be recommended. Discrepancies with an MSBDS < 6. (C) Multiple lytic lesions >5 mm (white arrows and the black arrow) at the junctional spine (T11-L1 level) with involvement of the vertebral body and pedicle. In this case, the MSBDS was 4 with a standard deviation of 2.6. (D) Single large focal lytic lesion >5 mm in the vertebral body (white arrow) with no vertebral collapse. In this case, the MSBDS was 5.7 with a standard deviation of 3.3 due to difficulties in spinal canal assessment, bone diameter and extraosseous involvement (asterisks).