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Osteonecrosis develops independently from radiological leukemic infiltration of bone in adolescents with acute lymphoblastic leukemia - first findings of the OPAL trial.

Kathinka KrullMarina KunstreichJanina Klasen-SansoneAndreas KloetgenFranziska GruenerGabriele EscherichKirsten BleckmannAnja MoerickeMartin SchrappeNorbert JorchDaniel SteinbachCarl-Friedrich ClassenAndreas GuggemosReinhard KolbDirk KleeArndt BorkhardtMichaela Kuhlen
Published in: Leukemia & lymphoma (2017)
Osteonecrosis (ON) is a debilitating side effect of anti-leukemic treatment. Thus far, the role of leukemic infiltration (LI) of bone is unclear. The first 30 children aged ≥10 years, who were enrolled in the ongoing OPAL trial and had MRI studies at diagnosis and at 6 months, were analyzed. MRI revealed extensive LIs in 24 (80%) patients. The signal abnormalities changed back to a physiological signal in 29 out of 30 children at 6 months. Of the 24 children with LIs at diagnosis, 3 (12.5%) developed ON ≥ II, whereas 4 (66.7%) patients without LIs subsequently developed ON ≥ II (p = .016). No differences between children initially presenting with/without LIs were observed concerning age, pubertal stage, white blood count, immunophenotype, and clinical presentation. Initial radiological LI of bone and, thus, single MRI at diagnosis cannot identify children at high risk of developing radiological ON at 6 months into treatment.
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