Danny L Costantini, Reza Vali Eman Marie, Mandy Kohli, Holly Convery, Martin Charron, Amer Shammas and Ronald M Laxer
The incidence of detecting focal chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) lesions on dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), and the effect of these lesions on DXA bone mineral density (BMD), bone mineral content (BMC), and their associated Z-scores were retrospectively reviewed. Materials and Methods. The study included 22 patients (14 females, 8 males; median age of 13 years) with CRMO and in whom a total body less head (TBLH) and lumbar spine DXA scan had been obtained. Whole-body bone scintigraphy and MRI were used as the reference standards. Sites involved with CRMO were subsequently detected and DXA measurements were re-measured after removing the sclerotic lesions from the analysis. Results. In total, sclerotic CRMO lesions were detected in 15 of the 22 patients (68%) by DXA, although the number of lesions detected (on a per-lesion analysis) was much less (i.e. 29 of 129 lesions; 19.4%) when compared to MRI and/or bone scintigraphy. Larger lesions had a greater impact on the derived BMD/BMC measurements, and changed the diagnosis in one patient from having normal to abnormal DXA results based on the final Z-score. Discussion. CRMO lesions detected on DXA examinations should be regarded as a potential source of error. Careful inspection and re-quantification of the BMD, BMC and associated Z-score after applying an appropriate correction should be considered in patients with large CRMO lesions identified on DXA examinations.
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