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Rhinosinusitis in autologous and allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: a retrospective study on the performance of imaging studies on severity and prognostic evaluation

Rinossinusite em transplante de células-tronco hematopoéticas autólogo e alogênico: um estudo retrospectivo sobre o desempenho de estudos de imagem na avaliação de severidade e prognóstico

The objective of this work was to evaluate the diagnostic and prognostic performance of a traditional imaging staging system for rhinosinusitis in the bone marrow transplantation (BMT) scenario. A retrospective cohort study was carried out at a bone marrow transplantation referral center involving subjects who underwent allogeneic or autologous BMT from September 1st 2005 to September 31st 2007 and later evolved with rhinosinusitis during the BMT inpatient period. Patients who had a previous history of sinusal disease or otolaryngologic surgery were excluded from the study. Data concerning mortality, the treatment of rhinosinusitis and BMT outcomes were extracted from medical files. The collected parameters were compared to the Lund-Mackay tomographic staging system score which was calculated based on available tomography films of each patient. A total of 85 BMT were performed and 23 allogeneic and 14 autologous (43.5%) BMT patients evolved with rhinosinusitis during transplantation. A significant association with LMS was found for the absolute neutrophil count (ANC), with a higher ANC (>500/mm3) correlating with a higher LMS (Mean LMS for lower ANC 6.08 and higher ANC 9.71 points, p<0.05). Need for surgical management and post-BMT admissions, the resolution of the rhinosinusitis and overall mortality had no significant correlation with LMS. Patients with less than 500 neutrophils/mm3 are known to be prone to more severe infections, but paradoxically showed lower LMS when developing rhinosinusitis. However, there were no differences in the main outcomes between those with higher and lower LMS. This would possibly lead to an equivocal assumption of a less severe disease. Severely neutropenic patients are probably not able to mount an effective inflammatory response capable of inducing significant tomographic abnormalities. So, this imaging study would not be able to adequately evaluate the extent of sinusal involvement. We thus conclude that LMS is not an adequate staging system to evaluate the severity of BMT sinusal disease. Rev. Bras. Hematol. Hemoter.

Sinusitis; bone marrow transplantation; tomography; diagonoses; prognoses


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