1. Correlation between whole skeleton dual energy CT calcium-subtracted attenuation and bone marrow infiltration in multiple myeloma.
- Author
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Gu R, Amlani A, Haberland U, Hodson D, Streetly M, Antonelli M, Dregely I, and Goh V
- Subjects
- Calcium, Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Skeleton pathology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Bone Marrow diagnostic imaging, Bone Marrow pathology, Multiple Myeloma diagnostic imaging, Multiple Myeloma pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: Objective evaluation of the extent of skeletal marrow involvement in multiple myeloma remains a clinical gap for CT. We aimed to develop a quantitative segmentation pipeline for dual energy CT and to assess whether quantified whole skeleton calcium-subtracted attenuation values correlate with biopsy-derived bone marrow infiltration in multiple myeloma., Methods: Consecutive prospective patients with suspected/established myeloma underwent dual source CT from the skull vertex to proximal tibia. Whole skeleton segmentation was performed for 120 kVp-equivalent images as follows: following Hounsfield unit (HU) thresholding, a Chan-Vese morphological operation was implemented to generate a whole skeleton segmentation mask. This mask was then applied to corresponding whole skeleton material decomposition calcium-subtracted maps, generating whole skeleton HU values. Associations with biopsy-derived bone marrow plasma cell infiltration percentage were assessed with Spearman's rank correlation; significance was at 5%., Results: 21 patients (12 females; median (IQR) 67 (61, 73) years) were included; 16 patients had osteolytic bone lesions; 15 patients underwent bone marrow biopsy. Segmentation and quantification were feasible in all patients. Median (IQR) of the average skeletal calcium-subtracted attenuation was -59.9 HU (-66.3, -51.8HU). There was a positive correlation with bone marrow plasma cell infiltration percentage (Spearman's rho: + 0.79, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Whole skeleton calcium-subtracted attenuation is associated with the degree of bone marrow infiltration by plasma cells, providing an objective measure of marrow involvement with the potential to allow earlier detection of disease., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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