Cheson B D, De Bellis C C, Schumann G B, Schumann J L
Am J Clin Pathol. 1985 Apr;83(4):421-5. doi: 10.1093/ajcp/83.4.421.
The authors examined urine specimens from 30 patients with multiple myeloma (MM) to determine the usefulness of cytodiagnostic urinalysis in evaluating such patients. Nine patients had clinical evidence of renal failure. In six of these nine patients (67%), or 20% of all patients, the urine sediment contained unique "MM-casts." These were characterized by a waxy to granular matrix surrounded by reactive, syncytial, giant cells with occasional renal cells embedded in the cast matrix. These casts were not observed in urine specimens from patients with normal renal function. Renal biopsy in two patients with MM-casts confirmed that cytologic diagnosis of "MM-kidney." The patient groups with or without MM-casts were comparable with respect to age, sex, and clinical stage of disease. In contrast, those with MM-casts were more likely to have clinical evidence of renal disease (100% vs. 13%), Bence Jones proteinuria (100% vs. 35%), hypercalcemia (50% vs. 8%), and hyperuricemia (50% vs. 4%). The two groups could not be distinguished reliably by urine physicochemical determinations. However, there were marked differences in the frequency of microscopic abnormalities. All patients with MM-cast formation excreted other pathologic casts as well and had evidence of tubular injury, while five of six had evidence of ischemic necrosis. This compared with 17%, 13%, and 21%, respectively, of those without MM-casts. Thus, cytodiagnostic urinalysis is of value in distinguishing MM-kidney from the numerous other causes of renal failure in patients with MM.