Nuclear Medicine Communications

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Nuclear Medicine Communications:
June 2008 - Volume 29 - Issue 6 - pp 542-545
doi: 10.1097/MNM.0b013e3282f5d2ee
Original Articles

Localized residual leukaemia in bone marrow of extremities

Liu, Yong; Zhang, Yifan; Hao, Weidong; Liu, Dai; Li, Ai; Chen, Chunyan

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Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to confirm localized residual leukaemia in the abnormal expanded peripheral bone marrow (e-PBM) of the extremities using 99mTc-sulfur colloid imaging and bone marrow aspirations.

Methods: Whole-body bone marrow scintigraphy was performed in 420 adult and 48 childhood leukaemia patients using 99mTc-sulfur colloid (370 MBq). Central bone marrow (CBM) from the iliac crest and e-PBM from the proximal epiphyseal line of the tibia were aspirated at the time of routine examination and compared.

Results: The expansion rate of the PBM in the non-remission stage of acute leukaemia was 73.1%, and it decreased to 38.4% in the complete remission stage. The most common site of PBM expansion was the epiphysis of the knee joint (74.5%). Cytological examination of the e-PBM at the complete remission stage revealed 30.9% localized residual leukaemia. The complete remission period (69±23 days) of PBM expansion was significantly greater than that of CBM depletion (43±31 days) (P<0.01). Localized residual leukaemia of the e-PBM could not be detected in the childhood acute leukaemia patients and in the patients without e-PBM. The difference in the relapse rate and time was statistically significant between patients with e-PBM (29.1%) and without e-PBM (3.5%) (P<0.01).

Conclusion: These findings suggest that induction chemotherapy does not always have a synchronous and parallel effect on CBM and PBM. The e-PBM is less sensitive to chemotherapy and can easily exist in localized residual leukaemia. The detection of residual leukaemia in the e-PBM by bone marrow scintigraphy is very important in the treatment of leukaemia.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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