Minimal residual disease in multiple myeloma: use of magnetic resonance imaging

The increasing percentage of patients achieving deep responses in multiple myeloma has led to the need for more sophisticated instruments to measure residual disease as a potential source of relapse. As minimal residual disease assessment is mostly performed on a bone marrow specimen from a certain area of the body, such samples have the limitation that they might not really represent the actual tumor burden, because focal accumulations of malignant cells might be either hit or missed. Magnetic resonance imaging is a highly sensitive technique for the assessment of tumor burden and can be performed as whole-body protocol, overcoming the problem of sampling error for minimal residual disease assessment.
Source: Seminars in Hematology - Category: Hematology Authors: Tags: Review Source Type: research