A 56-year-old man walked into the hospital with a problem he’d had for over ten years: nagging back pain. But this time, it was different. In just ten days, the pain became severe and spread through his body. He had also lost weight without trying. Doctors knew something was wrong, but the cause wasn’t clear.
This is a story about a hidden disease that can mimic other problems. It shows why doctors must look deeper when symptoms don’t add up.
Multiple myeloma is a cancer of plasma cells, a type of white blood cell that helps fight infection. It usually affects older adults and can cause bone pain, fatigue, and kidney problems. It’s not rare among blood cancers, but it can be tricky to spot early.
The most common way doctors find it is by detecting a special protein in the blood or urine. This protein is made by the cancer cells. But in about 1% of cases, called non-secretory myeloma, the cancer cells don’t make this protein. This makes the disease much harder to diagnose.
The Old Way vs. The New Way
For years, doctors relied heavily on blood and urine tests to find myeloma. If those tests were negative, they often looked elsewhere for the cause of a patient’s symptoms. This case challenges that approach.
Here’s the twist: even when standard protein tests are normal, the cancer can still be there. It just requires looking in a different place—the bone marrow.
Think of myeloma cells like a factory that has stopped shipping its product. The factory (the cancer cell) is still running, but the product (the protein) isn’t being released into the bloodstream. So, a blood test won’t find it.
Doctors need to visit the factory directly. A bone marrow biopsy is like sending an inspector into the factory to see what’s happening on the inside. This is where they found the cancer cells in this patient.
This report details the case of a 56-year-old man admitted to the hospital. Doctors ran a full workup, including blood tests, imaging scans, and a bone marrow biopsy. They also reviewed medical literature on similar cases to understand the bigger picture.
The patient’s blood tests showed some clues, but not the classic ones for myeloma. He had a high count of a specific white blood cell called an eosinophil, a low platelet count, and high inflammatory markers. Imaging scans revealed multiple holes in his bones, a classic sign of myeloma.
But the standard myeloma protein tests were all negative.
The key came from the bone marrow. It showed a high number of eosinophils and, more importantly, a small population of cancerous plasma cells. Genetic testing of these cells revealed specific abnormalities linked to myeloma.
After ruling out other causes of high eosinophils, the doctors made the diagnosis: non-secretory multiple myeloma with eosinophilia.
This is a reminder that a negative protein test does not always rule out myeloma.
This case highlights a major diagnostic challenge. When a patient has bone lesions and high eosinophils but negative protein tests, doctors might suspect other diseases. This report emphasizes that myeloma should still be on the list. It shows the importance of not stopping the investigation when the first set of tests comes back negative.
If you or a loved one has persistent bone pain, weight loss, and unusual blood test results, this story is a reminder to advocate for a thorough evaluation. A bone marrow biopsy may be necessary to get a clear answer, especially if standard tests are inconclusive.
This diagnosis is not made from a simple blood draw. It requires a specialist and more invasive testing.
This is a single case report. It shows one example of how this disease can present, but it doesn’t prove this is common. Every patient is different, and more research is needed to understand how often this happens.
Doctors will use this case to help recognize similar patients in the future. The next step is to study more cases to see how often non-secretory myeloma is missed when eosinophilia is present. This could lead to updated guidelines for diagnosing tricky cases like this one.