TY - JOUR
T1 - Soft tissue tumor imaging in adults
T2 - European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology–Guidelines 2024: imaging immediately after neoadjuvant therapy in soft tissue sarcoma, soft tissue tumor surveillance, and the role of interventional radiology
AU - Noebauer-Huhmann, Iris Melanie
AU - Vilanova, Joan C.
AU - Papakonstantinou, Olympia
AU - Weber, Marc André
AU - Lalam, Radhesh K.
AU - Nikodinovska, Violeta Vasilevska
AU - Sanal, Hatice T.
AU - Lecouvet, Frédéric E.
AU - Navas, Ana
AU - Martel-Villagrán, José
AU - de Rooy, Jacky W.J.
AU - Fritz, Jan
AU - Verstraete, Koenraad
AU - Grieser, Thomas
AU - Szomolanyi, Pavol
AU - Chaudhary, Snehansh
AU - Sconfienza, Luca Maria
AU - Tagliafico, Alberto S.
AU - Afonso, P. Diana
AU - Albtoush, Omar M.
AU - Aringhieri, Giacomo
AU - Arkun, Remide
AU - Aström, Gunnar
AU - Bazzocchi, Alberto
AU - Botchu, Rajesh
AU - Breitenseher, Martin
AU - Dalili, Danoob
AU - Davies, Mark
AU - de Jonge, Milko C.
AU - Mete, Berna D.
AU - Gielen, Jan L.M.A.
AU - Hide, Geoff
AU - Isaac, Amanda
AU - Ivanoski, Slavcho
AU - Mansour, Ramy M.
AU - Mccarthy, Catherine
AU - Muntaner-Gimbernat, Lorenzo
AU - O’Donnell, Paul
AU - Örgüç, Şebnem
AU - Rennie, Winston J.
AU - Resano, Santiago
AU - Robinson, Philip
AU - Ter Horst, Simone A.J.
AU - van Langevelde, Kirsten
AU - Wörtler, Klaus
AU - Koelz, Marita
AU - Panotopoulos, Joannis
AU - Windhager, Reinhard
AU - Fueger, Barbara J.
AU - Schmid, Maximilian
AU - Vanhoenacker, Filip M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Objectives: An update of the first European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology (ESSR) consensus on soft tissue tumor imaging in 2015 became necessary due to technical advancements, further insights into specific entities, and the revised WHO classification (2020) and AJCC staging system (2017). The third part of the revised guidelines covers algorithms and techniques beyond initial imaging: (1) Imaging after neoadjuvant therapy in soft tissue sarcoma, (2) sarcoma surveillance, and (3) special aspects, including surveillance of non-malignant entities and the role of interventional radiology. Materials and methods: A validated Delphi method based on peer-reviewed literature was used to derive consensus among a panel of 46 specialized musculoskeletal radiologists from 12 European countries. Statements that had undergone interdisciplinary revision were scored online by level of agreement (0 to 10) during two iterative rounds that could result in either ‘group consensus,’ ‘group agreement,’ or ‘lack of agreement.’ Results: The three sections contain 47 statements with comments. Group consensus was reached in 91.5%, group agreement in 6.4%, lack of agreement in 2.1%. In sarcoma, imaging immediately after neoadjuvant therapy is pivotal for determining the therapy effects and for resection-planning; surveillance should include imaging at fixed grade- and type-dependent intervals. In general, MRI is the method of choice for loco-regional surveillance of soft tissue sarcomas, and chest CT to assess metastatic disease. Interventional radiology has a role, especially in oligometastatic disease, palliative tumor control and local recurrences. Conclusion: Strategies for standardized soft tissue tumor imaging regarding therapy control, surveillance, and useful interventional procedures are provided. Key Points: Question An ESSR consensus update on soft tissue tumor imaging regarding surveillance became necessary due to technical advancements, further entity-specific insights, and revised WHO- and AJCC-classifications. Findings Imaging immediately after neoadjuvant therapy in soft tissue sarcoma is pivotal. Post-therapeutic surveillance should include imaging at regular intervals, stratified for tumor grade and type. Clinical relevance The updated ESSR soft tissue tumor imaging guidelines aim to provide best practice expert consensus for standardized imaging, to support radiologists in their decision-making, and to improve examination comparability, both in individual patients and in future studies on individualized strategies.
AB - Objectives: An update of the first European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology (ESSR) consensus on soft tissue tumor imaging in 2015 became necessary due to technical advancements, further insights into specific entities, and the revised WHO classification (2020) and AJCC staging system (2017). The third part of the revised guidelines covers algorithms and techniques beyond initial imaging: (1) Imaging after neoadjuvant therapy in soft tissue sarcoma, (2) sarcoma surveillance, and (3) special aspects, including surveillance of non-malignant entities and the role of interventional radiology. Materials and methods: A validated Delphi method based on peer-reviewed literature was used to derive consensus among a panel of 46 specialized musculoskeletal radiologists from 12 European countries. Statements that had undergone interdisciplinary revision were scored online by level of agreement (0 to 10) during two iterative rounds that could result in either ‘group consensus,’ ‘group agreement,’ or ‘lack of agreement.’ Results: The three sections contain 47 statements with comments. Group consensus was reached in 91.5%, group agreement in 6.4%, lack of agreement in 2.1%. In sarcoma, imaging immediately after neoadjuvant therapy is pivotal for determining the therapy effects and for resection-planning; surveillance should include imaging at fixed grade- and type-dependent intervals. In general, MRI is the method of choice for loco-regional surveillance of soft tissue sarcomas, and chest CT to assess metastatic disease. Interventional radiology has a role, especially in oligometastatic disease, palliative tumor control and local recurrences. Conclusion: Strategies for standardized soft tissue tumor imaging regarding therapy control, surveillance, and useful interventional procedures are provided. Key Points: Question An ESSR consensus update on soft tissue tumor imaging regarding surveillance became necessary due to technical advancements, further entity-specific insights, and revised WHO- and AJCC-classifications. Findings Imaging immediately after neoadjuvant therapy in soft tissue sarcoma is pivotal. Post-therapeutic surveillance should include imaging at regular intervals, stratified for tumor grade and type. Clinical relevance The updated ESSR soft tissue tumor imaging guidelines aim to provide best practice expert consensus for standardized imaging, to support radiologists in their decision-making, and to improve examination comparability, both in individual patients and in future studies on individualized strategies.
KW - Consensus
KW - Diagnostic imaging
KW - Practice guideline
KW - Sarcoma (Soft tissue)
KW - Soft tissue neoplasms
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212441458&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00330-024-11242-0
DO - 10.1007/s00330-024-11242-0
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39694887
AN - SCOPUS:85212441458
SN - 0938-7994
VL - 35
SP - 3324
EP - 3335
JO - European Radiology
JF - European Radiology
IS - 6
M1 - 657
ER -