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Imaging of treatment response and minimal residual disease in multiple myeloma: state of the art WB-MRI and PET/CT

Authors :
François Jamar
Bruno Vande Berg
Frédéric Lecouvet
Souad Acid
Marie-Christiane Vekemans
Jens Hillengass
Jacques Malghem
Koenraad Verstraete
Joris Wuts
Olivier Gheysens
Thomas Van Den Berghe
Thomas Kirchgesner
Vincent Vandecaveye
UCL - SSS/IREC/IMAG - Pôle d'imagerie médicale
UCL - (SLuc) Service de radiologie
UCL - SSS/IREC/SLUC - Pôle St.-Luc
UCL - (SLuc) Centre du cancer
UCL - (SLuc) Service d'hématologie
UCL - SSS/IREC/MIRO - Pôle d'imagerie moléculaire, radiothérapie et oncologie
UCL - (SLuc) Service de médecine nucléaire
Multidimensional signal processing and communication
Electronics and Informatics
Faculty of Engineering
Source :
Skeletal Radiology, Vol. 51, no. 1, p. 59-80 (2022), SKELETAL RADIOLOGY, Skeletal Radiology
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2022.

Abstract

Bone imaging has been intimately associated with the diagnosis and staging of multiple myeloma (MM) for more than 5 decades, as the presence of bone lesions indicates advanced disease and dictates treatment initiation. The methods used have been evolving, and the historical radiographic skeletal survey has been replaced by whole body CT, whole body MRI (WB-MRI) and [18F]FDG-PET/CT for the detection of bone marrow lesions and less frequent extramedullary plasmacytomas.Beyond diagnosis, imaging methods are expected to provide the clinician with evaluation of the response to treatment. Imaging techniques are consistently challenged as treatments become more and more efficient, inducing profound response, with more subtle residual disease. WB-MRI and FDG-PET/CT are the methods of choice to address these challenges, being able to assess disease progression or response and to detect “minimal” residual disease, providing key prognostic information and guiding necessary change of treatment.This paper provides an up-to-date overview of the WB-MRI and PET/CT techniques, their observations in responsive and progressive disease and their role and limitations in capturing minimal residual disease. It reviews trials assessing these techniques for response evaluation, points out the limited comparisons between both methods and highlights their complementarity with most recent molecular methods (next-generation flow cytometry, next-generation sequencing) to detect minimal residual disease. It underlines the important role of PET/MRI technology as a research tool to compare the effectiveness and complementarity of both methods to address the key clinical questions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03642348 and 14322161
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Skeletal Radiology, Vol. 51, no. 1, p. 59-80 (2022), SKELETAL RADIOLOGY, Skeletal Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....456a35feae8e505295e9f3ca61464ab8