Role of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Management of Patients With Multiple Myeloma: A Consensus Statement — Meletios A Dimopoulos (2015) | RDL Network
MRI has high sensitivity for the early detection of marrow infiltration by myeloma cells compared with other radiographic methods. Thus, MRI detects bone involvement in patients with myeloma much earlier than the myeloma-related bone destruction, with no radiation exposure. It is the gold standard for the imaging of axial skeleton, for the evaluation of painful lesions, and for distinguishing benign versus malignant osteoporotic vertebral fractures. MRI has the ability to detect spinal cord or nerve compression and presence of soft tissue masses, and it is recommended for the workup of solitary bone plasmacytoma. Regarding smoldering or asymptomatic myeloma, all patients should undergo whole-body MRI (WB-MRI; or spine and pelvic MRI if WB-MRI is not available), and if they have > one focal lesion of a diameter > 5 mm, they should be considered to have symptomatic disease that requires therapy. In cases of equivocal small lesions, a second MRI should be performed after 3 to 6 months, and if there is progression on MRI, the patient should be treated as having symptomatic myeloma. MRI at diagnosis of symptomatic patients and after treatment (mainly after autologous stem-cell transplantation) provides prognostic information; however, to date, this does not change treatment selection.
Evangelos Terpos, Martina Kleber, Monika Engelhardt, Sonja Zweegman, Francesca Gay, Efstathios Kastritis, Niels W.C.J. van de Donk, Benedetto Bruno, Orhan Sezer, Annemiek Broijl, Sara Bringhen, Meral Beksaç, Alessandra Larocca, Roman Hájek, Pellegrino Musto, Hans Erik Johnsen, Fortunato Morabito, Heinz Ludwig, Michèle Cavo, H. Einsele, Pieter Sonneveld, Meletios A Dimopoulos, Antonio Palumbo
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