AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed 410 patients who underwent pelvic radiotherapy, focusing on the occurrence and recovery of radiation-induced changes in the sacrum over a follow-up period averaging 22 months.
  • Results showed that 17.6% of patients developed pathological signal changes, predominantly radiation osteitis, and 43.1% experienced sacral insufficiency fractures.
  • The research concluded that these radiation-induced changes typically onset early (around 4 months post-treatment) and often show significant recovery within 16.5 months, with osteoradionecrosis being relatively rare.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate the incidence rate, time-to-onset and recovery, MRI morphology and occurrence of insufficiency fractures in radiation-induced changes in the sacrum following pelvic radiotherapy.

Material And Methods: 410 patients with pelvic malignancies treated with radiotherapy were reviewed. Follow-up was 1-124 months (mean 22 months). Serial MRI (average four studies/patient) were analysed using a new semi-quantitative score (Radiation-Induced Sacral Changes=RISC). A size category (I/II/III), a type category for MR signal morphologies (a/b/c) and sacral insufficiency fractures (+/-) were applied.

Results: Seventy-two patients (17.6 %) were found to have new pathological signal changes. Radiation osteitis was documented in 83.3 % (60/72, RISC stage a + b), and definite osteonecrosis (stage c) in 12 patients (16.7 %, 12/72). Thirty-one patients (43.1 %) had sacral insufficiency fractures. Initial bone marrow signal changes were found 1-35 months (median 4 months) after radiotherapy. The maximum manifestation of radiation-induced signal changes occurred after 1-35 months (mean 11 months). Fifty-six cases (77.8 %) showed a significant signal recovery within 16.5 months.

Conclusion: Radiation-induced bone marrow changes appear with a high incidence at the sacrum with an early onset and frequent recovery. The majority presented a pattern of radiation osteitis, whereas osteoradionecrosis was proportionately rare.

Key Points: • Radiation-induced sacral bone marrow changes appear frequently (17.6 %) following pelvic radiotherapy. • Insufficiency fractures are common late effects (43 %). • Radiation osteitis develops early (4 mo), with recovery between 16.5 and 39.5 months. • Definite radiological osteoradionecrosis is proportionately rare (3 %). • A 3-stage classification system simplifies and standardizes the morphological disease staging.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-018-5325-2DOI Listing

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