Imaging in Multiple Myeloma: A Radiology Overview

Introduction

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell malignancy characterized by bone marrow infiltration, osteolytic lesions, and systemic complications (CRAB: hyperCalcemia, Renal dysfunction, Anemia, Bone lesions).
Radiology plays a central role in diagnosis, staging, treatment monitoring, and detecting complications.


Conventional Radiography (Skeletal Survey)

  • Traditionally the first-line imaging in myeloma.
  • Findings:
    • Multiple “punched-out lytic lesions” without sclerotic rim.
    • Common sites: skull (“raindrop skull”), spine, ribs, pelvis, proximal humerur & femur.
    • Pathological fractures are frequent.
  • Limitations:
    • Needs ≥30–50% bone loss before changes appear.
    • Underestimates disease burden.

CT (Computed Tomography)

  • More sensitive than radiographs for cortical destruction.
  • Useful for detecting:
    • Small lytic lesions (<5 mm).
    • Fracture risk evaluation.
    • Guiding biopsy.
  • Low-dose whole-body CT (WBCT) is now often preferred over skeletal survey in many centers.

MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)

  • Most sensitive modality for detecting marrow infiltration.
  • Patterns of marrow involvement:
    • Focal lesions.
    • Diffuse infiltration.
    • Variegated (“salt-and-pepper”).
    • Normal (especially early disease).
  • Advantages:
    • Detects lesions before cortical bone destruction.
    • Best for spinal cord compression and soft tissue plasmacytomas.
  • Sequences: T1 (low signal in lesions), STIR (bright), DWI adds sensitivity.

PET-CT (FDG PET/CT)

  • Detects metabolically active disease.
  • Useful in:
    • Staging.
    • Treatment response assessment.
    • Detecting extramedullary disease.
  • Shows both bone lesions and systemic spread.

Imaging Guidelines (IMWG Recommendations)

  • First-line: Whole-body low-dose CT or whole-body MRI.
  • PET-CT for treatment response and follow-up.
  • Plain X-rays are now less favored but may still be used in resource-limited settings.

Key Imaging Signs in Multiple Myeloma

  • Raindrop skull (lytic punched-out lesions in the skull).
  • Diffuse osteopenia with vertebral compression fractures.
  • Plasmacytoma: solitary expansile lytic lesion with soft tissue mass.

📝 Teaching Points

  • X-rays: detect classic lytic lesions but insensitive.
  • CT: more sensitive for bone destruction.
  • MRI: most sensitive for marrow disease and complications.
  • PET-CT: best for metabolic activity and treatment monitoring.
  • Shift in practice → from skeletal survey → whole-body CT/MRI as standard of care.

✅ Conclusion

Modern imaging has transformed myeloma care. While plain radiographs show the classic lytic lesions, whole-body MRI and PET-CT are now the gold standards for early detection, risk stratification, and response assessment. A multimodality approach ensures optimal patient management.

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