Abstract

The purposes of this study were to describe the spectrum of MRI findings and determine the prognostic role of MRI in adults with acute leukemia with positive CSF cytology. In this retrospective study of 34 patients (19 women, 15 men; mean age, 51 years; range, 18-72 years) treated for CNS leukemia between 2006 and 2011, 31 (91%) contrast-enhanced brain and 14 (41%) spine MRI studies were reviewed by two radiologists to note patterns of enhancement. Interobserver agreement and correlation of enhancement with outcome were analyzed. MRI showed abnormal findings in 25 patients (74%). Pachymeningeal enhancement (n = 9/31, 29%), leptomeningeal enhancement (n = 6/31, 19%), cranial nerve enhancement (n = 9/31, 29%), masslike enhancement (n = 3/31, 10%), and spinal meningeal enhancement (n = 10/14, 71%) were identified. There was strong interobserver agreement (κ = 0.906). Survival rates were shorter to a statistically significant degree with pachymeningeal enhancement (median, 7 months; interquartile range [IQR], 5-8 months versus median, 26 months; IQR, 15 months to not reached; p = 0.004) and two or more sites of enhancement (median, 8 months; IQR, 3-13 months versus median, 19 months; IQR, 9 months to not reached; p = 0.046). Brain or spine MRI examinations (or both) showed abnormal findings in nearly three-fourths of adults with acute leukemia with positive CSF cytology who were imaged for neurologic symptoms. Pachymeningeal enhancement and two or more sites of brain involvement were associated with shorter survival.

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