Musculoskeletal Myeloid Sarcoma: Clinical, Imaging, Management, and Outcomes in 41 Adult Patients.
[OBJECTIVE] To analyze symptoms, imaging features, management, and outcomes of musculoskeletal myeloid sarcoma in adult leukemic patients.
APA
Kumar R, Hwang S, et al. (2026). Musculoskeletal Myeloid Sarcoma: Clinical, Imaging, Management, and Outcomes in 41 Adult Patients.. Journal of computer assisted tomography, 50(1), 133-143. https://doi.org/10.1097/RCT.0000000000001788
MLA
Kumar R, et al.. "Musculoskeletal Myeloid Sarcoma: Clinical, Imaging, Management, and Outcomes in 41 Adult Patients.." Journal of computer assisted tomography, vol. 50, no. 1, 2026, pp. 133-143.
PMID
40758381
Abstract
[OBJECTIVE] To analyze symptoms, imaging features, management, and outcomes of musculoskeletal myeloid sarcoma in adult leukemic patients.
[MATERIALS AND METHODS] This is a retrospective analysis of clinical symptoms, imaging features, management, and outcomes in 41 adult leukemic patients with biopsy-proven myeloid sarcomas of bones and muscles.
[RESULTS] Nineteen patients had acute, and 15 had chronic myeloid leukemia. Additional 5 previously treated leukemia patients included 1 with chronic myeloid leukemia, 3 with myelofibrosis, and 1 with myelodysplastic syndrome. The remaining 2 patients had isolated myeloid sarcoma with normal marrow without a history of hematologic disorder. Twenty-nine patients had bone tumors only, 3 muscle tumors only, 8 both bone and soft tissue tumors, and 1 intraarticular synovial tumor of an ankle. Of the 71 focal bone tumors, 68 were lytic and 3 were sclerotic. In addition, diffuse sclerotic bone lesions were present in 1 patient, and diffuse mixed lytic/sclerotic bone lesions in 2 patients. Most tumors were asymptomatic and were discovered incidentally on imaging. Local pain, mass, and pathologic fractures were the most common complaints when present. Vertebral bone and paravertebral soft tissue tumors caused neurological symptoms. Muscle tumors became symptomatic when they involved adjoining bone, nerve, or spinal cord. Only 3 among 13 muscle tumors presented as palpable masses. The imaging features of these musculoskeletal tumors were nonspecific. On MRI, both muscle and lytic bone MSs were hypo-to-iso-intense on T1WI, hyperintense on fat-suppressed T2WI, and enhanced on post-contrast fat-suppressed T1WI. A synovial myeloid sarcoma of the ankle showed diffusely thickened synovium on MRI. F-18 FDG PET-CT was helpful in the detection, monitoring of treatment response, and post-treatment surveillance in 5 patients. All patients were treated with cytarabine-based systemic anti-leukemic treatment and optional radiation, surgical resection, bone marrow transplant, and/or a combination of these. The known mean survival time of 35 dead patients after the appearance of musculoskeletal MS was 12.1 months.
[CONCLUSIONS] Musculoskeletal myeloid sarcoma, which can occasionally precede it, is a rare complication of AML. Most tumors are asymptomatic. Imaging, particularly MRI and 18-F FDG PET-CT, plays a crucial role in detecting and monitoring treatment response, as well as post-treatment surveillance. The disease has poor clinical outcomes and short-term survival.
[MATERIALS AND METHODS] This is a retrospective analysis of clinical symptoms, imaging features, management, and outcomes in 41 adult leukemic patients with biopsy-proven myeloid sarcomas of bones and muscles.
[RESULTS] Nineteen patients had acute, and 15 had chronic myeloid leukemia. Additional 5 previously treated leukemia patients included 1 with chronic myeloid leukemia, 3 with myelofibrosis, and 1 with myelodysplastic syndrome. The remaining 2 patients had isolated myeloid sarcoma with normal marrow without a history of hematologic disorder. Twenty-nine patients had bone tumors only, 3 muscle tumors only, 8 both bone and soft tissue tumors, and 1 intraarticular synovial tumor of an ankle. Of the 71 focal bone tumors, 68 were lytic and 3 were sclerotic. In addition, diffuse sclerotic bone lesions were present in 1 patient, and diffuse mixed lytic/sclerotic bone lesions in 2 patients. Most tumors were asymptomatic and were discovered incidentally on imaging. Local pain, mass, and pathologic fractures were the most common complaints when present. Vertebral bone and paravertebral soft tissue tumors caused neurological symptoms. Muscle tumors became symptomatic when they involved adjoining bone, nerve, or spinal cord. Only 3 among 13 muscle tumors presented as palpable masses. The imaging features of these musculoskeletal tumors were nonspecific. On MRI, both muscle and lytic bone MSs were hypo-to-iso-intense on T1WI, hyperintense on fat-suppressed T2WI, and enhanced on post-contrast fat-suppressed T1WI. A synovial myeloid sarcoma of the ankle showed diffusely thickened synovium on MRI. F-18 FDG PET-CT was helpful in the detection, monitoring of treatment response, and post-treatment surveillance in 5 patients. All patients were treated with cytarabine-based systemic anti-leukemic treatment and optional radiation, surgical resection, bone marrow transplant, and/or a combination of these. The known mean survival time of 35 dead patients after the appearance of musculoskeletal MS was 12.1 months.
[CONCLUSIONS] Musculoskeletal myeloid sarcoma, which can occasionally precede it, is a rare complication of AML. Most tumors are asymptomatic. Imaging, particularly MRI and 18-F FDG PET-CT, plays a crucial role in detecting and monitoring treatment response, as well as post-treatment surveillance. The disease has poor clinical outcomes and short-term survival.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Male; Female; Sarcoma, Myeloid; Adult; Middle Aged; Retrospective Studies; Aged; Bone Neoplasms; Muscle Neoplasms; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Young Adult; Treatment Outcome; Adolescent
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