Abstract
Purpose: To assess whether whole-body MRI detects more clinically relevant lesions (i.e., leading to a change in Ann Arbor stage) than an MRI protocol that only includes the head/neck and trunk (i.e., from cranial vertex to groin, excluding the arms) in patients with lymphoma. Materials and Methods: One hundred consecutive patients with newly diagnosed lymphoma prospectively underwent T1-weighted and T2-weighted short inversion time inversion recovery whole-body MRI. The number of lymphomatous sites at MRI with a field of view (FOV) limited to the head/neck and trunk, and the additional number of lymphomatous sites at whole-body MRI and their influence on Ann Arbor stage were determined. Results: At MRI with a FOV limited to the head/neck and trunk, 507 sites were classified as lymphomatous. At whole-body MRI, 7 additional sites outside the head/neck and trunk in 7 patients (7.0%; 95% confidence interval: 3.4-13.8%) were classified as lymphomatous, but Ann Arbor stage never changed. Conclusion: Whole-body MRI did not detect any clinically relevant lesions outside the FOV of an MRI protocol that only includes the head/neck and trunk. Therefore, it may be sufficient to only include the head/neck and trunk when using MRI for staging lymphoma. Copyright © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Kwee, T. C., Akkerman, E. M., Fijnheer, R., José Kersten, M., Zsíros, J., Ludwig, I., … Nievelstein, R. A. J. (2011). MRI for staging lymphoma: Whole-body or less? Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 33(5), 1144–1150. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.22549
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