ParaneoplasticPlasma-cell dyscrasiaICD-10 C90.0

POEMS syndrome

POEMS; Crow-Fukase syndrome; Takatsuki syndrome; PEP syndrome

POEMS syndrome is a rare multisystem paraneoplastic disorder driven by a plasma-cell dyscrasia (usually osteosclerotic myeloma or solitary plasmacytoma) with characteristic Polyneuropathy, Organomegaly, Endocrinopathy, Monoclonal gammopathy and Skin changes. The cutaneous features β€” glomeruloid haemangiomas (highly characteristic), diffuse hyperpigmentation, hypertrichosis, skin thickening, clubbing, white nails, plethora, sclerodermoid change, and lymphangiectasia β€” are often the diagnostic clue. Median age at diagnosis 50, male predominance. Multidisciplinary haematology-led care with autologous stem-cell transplantation, lenalidomide / thalidomide, and radiotherapy for solitary plasmacytoma. Five-year survival 75–85% with modern treatment.

CurrentLast reviewed 15 May 2026

POEMS β€” diagnostic criteria

  • POEMS diagnostic criteria (Dispenzieri 2017):
    • Major mandatory β€” Polyneuropathy and Monoclonal plasma-cell disorder.
    • Major (β‰₯ 1 required) β€” sclerotic bone lesion(s), Castleman disease, elevated serum VEGF.
    • Minor (β‰₯ 1) β€” Organomegaly (hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy), extravascular volume overload (oedema, effusions, ascites), endocrinopathy (gonadal, adrenal, thyroid, pituitary, pancreas), skin changes, papilloedema, thrombocytosis / polycythaemia.
  • Both major mandatory + 1 major + 1 minor needed for diagnosis.
  • The acronym POEMS captures only some features β€” VEGF elevation and Castleman disease are now considered key.

Skin features

  • Glomeruloid haemangiomas β€” pathognomonic; firm dome-shaped red-purple papules, 2–5 mm, on the trunk and extremities. Histology β€” capillary loops within ectatic vessels resembling renal glomeruli.
  • Diffuse skin hyperpigmentation.
  • Hypertrichosis (especially face).
  • Skin thickening and induration (sclerodermoid).
  • White nails (leuconychia totalis).
  • Plethora / red facial complexion.
  • Acrocyanosis.
  • Clubbing.
  • Lymphangiectasia, telangiectasia.

Workup

  • Confirmation of plasma-cell disorder β€” serum protein electrophoresis, immunofixation (typically Ξ» light chain).
  • Serum VEGF β€” elevated; supportive.
  • Skeletal survey / CT β€” sclerotic or mixed bone lesions.
  • FDG-PET-CT β€” Castleman disease, plasmacytoma localisation.
  • Bone marrow biopsy β€” typically < 10% plasma cells (low burden).
  • EMG / nerve-conduction studies β€” demyelinating + axonal polyneuropathy.
  • Endocrine workup β€” gonadal, adrenal, thyroid, pancreas, pituitary.
  • Echo + abdominal imaging β€” organomegaly, effusions.
  • Ophthalmology β€” papilloedema.

Management

  • Localised disease (1–3 sclerotic plasmacytomas, no bone-marrow involvement) β€” radiotherapy (40–50 Gy) curative in many.
  • Disseminated disease β€” autologous stem-cell transplantation in fit patients; high response rates.
  • Lenalidomide + dexamethasone β€” for transplant-ineligible / relapsed.
  • Thalidomide + dexamethasone, bortezomib-based regimens, cyclophosphamide-based regimens β€” alternatives.
  • VEGF inhibition (bevacizumab) β€” limited evidence; adjunctive.
  • Long-term follow-up β€” neuropathy, endocrine surveillance, recurrence monitoring.
  • Multidisciplinary β€” haematology, neurology, endocrinology, dermatology.

References

  1. Dispenzieri A. POEMS syndrome β€” 2017 update on diagnosis, risk stratification, and management. Am J Hematol; 2017.
  2. Bardwick PA et al. Plasma cell dyscrasia with polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M-protein, and skin changes. Medicine; 1980 (POEMS acronym coined).

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