Journal of Clinical Medicine (Nov 2023)

Spinal Involvement in Patients with Chronic Non-Bacterial Osteomyelitis (CNO): An Analysis of Distinctive Imaging Features

  • Marta Byrdy-Daca,
  • Marek Duczkowski,
  • Iwona Sudoł-Szopińska,
  • Marta Żelewska,
  • Krzysztof Piłat,
  • Filip Daca,
  • Michał Nieciecki,
  • Paweł Sztwiertnia,
  • Jerzy Walecki,
  • Andrzej Cieszanowski,
  • Jan Świątkowski,
  • Marlena Bereźniak,
  • Katarzyna Sułkowska,
  • Jarosław Czubak,
  • Marek Gołębiowski,
  • Piotr Palczewski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12237419
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 23
p. 7419

Abstract

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Spinal involvement by chronic non-bacterial osteomyelitis (CNO) has been increasingly reported in recent years, often being presented as a diagnostic dilemma requiring differential diagnosis with bacterial spondylodiscitis and/or neoplasia. This study was aimed at identifying the imaging features of CNO facilitating its differentiation from other spinal diseases. Two radiologists assessed the imaging studies of 45 patients (16 male and 29 female, aged from 6 to 75 years, 15 children) with CNO collected from 5 referential centers. Spinal lesions were found in 17 patients (2 children and 15 adults), most often in the thoracic spine. In children, the lesions involved short segments with a destruction of vertebral bodies. In adults, the main findings were prominent bone marrow edema and osteosclerosis, endplate irregularities, and ankylosing lesions extending over long segments; paraspinal inflammation was mild and abscesses were not observed. In both children and adults, the involvement of posterior elements (costovertebral and facet joints) emerged as an important discriminator between CNO and neoplasia/other inflammatory conditions. In conclusion, a careful inspection of imaging studies may help to reduce the number of biopsies performed in the diagnostic process of CNO.

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