4.3 Article

Whole-body MRI at initial presentation of pediatric chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis and correlation with clinical assessment

Journal

PEDIATRIC RADIOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 12, Pages 2377-2387

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00247-022-05388-6

Keywords

Bone; Children; Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis; Disease severity; Magnetic resonance imaging; Physician global assessment; Scoring; Whole-body magnetic resonance imaging

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This study retrospectively analyzed whole-body MRI results of CRMO patients and correlated them with clinical disease severity at initial rheumatology presentation. The results showed that CRMO lesions were mainly distributed in the pelvis and lower extremities, and the number of lesions detected on MRI at initial presentation had a significant correlation with disease severity. However, other MRI parameters did not correlate with disease severity.
Background Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) is a diagnosis of exclusion, relying heavily on whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (WB-MRI) for diagnosing and evaluating response to therapy. Information with respect to disease distribution and imaging correlation with clinical disease severity at initial presentation is lacking. Objective To retrospectively characterize distribution of disease on WB-MRI and to correlate imaging findings with disease severity at initial rheumatology presentation. Materials and methods Using a modified version of a recently devised imaging-based scoring system, we evaluated disease distribution and correlation between findings on WB-MRI and clinical disease severity in 54 patients presenting for initial evaluation of CRMO. Symptomatic lesion sites were extracted from chart review and physician global assessment was determined by the consensus of two rheumatologists. Results Sites of CRMO involvement evident on imaging at initial presentation had a strong predilection for the pelvis and lower extremities. There was significant correlation between the number of lesions detected on WB-MRI and total clinical severity score at initial rheumatology presentation (P<0.01). However, no other imaging parameter correlated with disease severity. Conclusion While the overall number of lesions identified on MRI correlates with clinical severity scores at initial imaging, other MR parameters of CRMO lesions may not be reliable indicators of disease severity at initial presentation. Further research is needed to assess whether these parameters are implicated in longitudinal disease severity or overall response to therapy.

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