Tumor List
Case | Symptoms and Presentation |
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Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma | Patients present with local pain and a mass. Headache occurs in the skull lesions. Base of skull lesions present with brainstem symptoms, and cranial nerve dysfunction. |
Metastatic Breast Cancer | Pain is the most common presenting symptom. Pathological fracture rarely occurs without a history of a few weeks or months of increasingly severe pain. In some cases the patient has tried to ignore or deny the symptoms. Sometimes a painful bone lesion is thought to be a "muscle pull" or a "sprain" and strong pain medicines are prescribed, allowing the patient to continue to tolerate very severe pain before the true nature of the problem is discovered. Systemic symptoms may also occur, such as hypercalcemia. |
Metastatic Kidney Cancer | Pain is the most common presenting symptom. Pathological fracture rarely occurs without a history of a few weeks or months of increasingly severe pain. In some cases the patient has tried to ignore or deny the symptoms. Sometimes a painful bone lesion is thought to be a "muscle pull" or a "sprain" and strong pain medicines are prescribed, allowing the patient to continue to tolerate very severe pain before the true nature of the problem is discovered. Systemic symptoms may also occur, such as hypercalcemia. An occasional patient may have hypertesion from the tumor affecting the renin-angiotensin pathway. Hematuria is also a common sign, but small amounts of blood in the urine cannot be detected without a urinalysis When a patient has a metastasis and no site of origin can be found (a metastasis of unknown origin) the most likely site is the lung or kidney. |
Metastatic Lung Cancer | Pain is the most common presenting symptom. Pathological fracture rarely occurs without a history of a few weeks or months of increasingly severe pain. In some cases the patient has tried to ignore or deny the symptoms. Sometimes a painful bone lesion is thought to be a "muscle pull" or a "sprain" and strong pain medicines are prescribed, allowing the patient to continue to tolerate very severe pain before the true nature of the problem is discovered. Systemic symptoms may also occur, such as hypercalcemia and hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy (painful thickening of the long and short tubular bones and clubbing of the fingers). |
Metastatic Prostate Cancer | Diagnosing prostate cancer usually begins with elevated serum PSA and/or prostatic acid phosphatase, or the palpation of nodules on a digital rectal exam. Diagnosis is typically confirmed by a biopsy guided by transrectal ultrasonography. PSA is also currently the most useful marker for assessing the level of bone involvement in prostate cancer. Diagnosis of bone metastases is accomplished by a bone scan. The problem with bone scans is that they are considered sensitive in the initial diagnosis, but the specificity is relatively low. They are also not suitable for monitoring short-term response to treatment. Other markers are currently under investigation to measure the amount of bone involvement. One such marker, pyridinoline cross-linked carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (ICTP), is cleaved during type I collagen degradation which is indicative of bone turnover. The current thinking is that ICTP is more specific to bone than PSA, but further studies need to be done. The actual mechanism by which metastatic cancer cells elicit osteoblastic reactions is not known. However, Koeneman et al have proposed that "in order to thrive in the bone environment, cancer cells must acquire 'bone cell-like' properties." It is believed that there are reciprocal cellular interactions between prostate cancer cells and bone stroma that result in proliferation of both prostate cancer and bone stromal cells. This interaction involves the participation of growth factors, such as TGF-ß, bFGF, and IGF on both bone and prostate, which is further modulated by the differentiating actions of bone morphogenetic proteins and PTH-related proteins. In the end, conditions are suited for osteoblastic growth, and the consequences are bone pain, inflammation, and increased risk for fractures.Also, vertebral tumors may compress the spinal cord and cause nerve damage. It is important to get a good feel for the level of bone involvement, because it has a significant impact on overall patient survival. The current methods of treatment for prostate cancer are prostatectomy, radiation therapy, and hormone therapy. Hormone therapy can be accomplished by a few different methods. Orchiectomy and administration of estrogen are two options. Although 60-80% of patients with advanced prostate cancer improve following castration, there is an inevitable progression to a testicular androgen-independent state, in which adrenal androgens take over. There are also drugs that effect the pituitary gland directly, such as LHRH agonists, and some patients also receive antiandrogen drugs to block the effect of androgens produced from the adrenal glands producing a total androgen blockade. Some patients with metastases often require additional treatment, such as second-line hormone therapy, which further suppress the production of androgens, or block their actions at the cancer cell itself. Other options are chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and bisphosphonates, which degrade osteoclasts, and prevent bone breakdown. Bisphosphonates are still under investigation for their effectiveness in metastatic prostate cancer. In cases in which the patient is in severe pain, administration of narcotics and a referral to a pain management specialist may be warranted. It is recommended that patients with bone metastases should start androgen withdrawal therapy immediately upon diagnosis. However, hormone therapy does not provide a cure for the majority of cases of prostate cancer that have metastasized to bone. There are also many side effects of androgen ablation. Namely, decreased sexual functions, hot flushes, anemia, weight gain, and in the long run, bone loss and osteoporosis. A total androgen blockade has at best modest benefits. The survival rate is projected at 8-10% at five years, and it has no advantage over orchiectomy at two years. Also, 60% of newly diagnosed patients with metastases die by 2 years. Routine periodic examinations and bone scans should be performed on a patient with metastatic prostate cancer. The goal is to prevent the progression of a metastasis to a pathological fracture. Skeletal metastases are very common in prostate cancer. At autopsy, 84% of those with prostatic adenocarcinoma have skeletal metastases, while in 1982, of 20,000 new cases of prostate cancer, 21.5% of patients presented with clinical stage D (metastatic) prostate cancer. Skeletal metastases are also generally associated with poor prognosis. Only 23% of patients survived 5 years from initial diagnosis, and the 10-year survival rate is 10%. As mentioned above, the most common sites for skeletal metastases are, in order of decreasing frequency, vertebrae, sternum, pelvic bones, ribs, and femurs.1 However, the most common sites for fracture are the medial cortex of the proximal femur and the vertebral bodies because these two sites are required to carry heavy loads. Overall, the pathologic fracture rate from prostate cancer is relatively low compared to that of other metastatic cancers.9 The reason for this low rate is because of the bone forming osteoblastic reaction by the tumor. Even in those cases in which fractures do occur, the rate of healing approaches that of normal bone. Normal healing, in conjunction with effective radiotherapy and hormonal manipulation limits the need for surgical stabilization to only about one fourth of the patients who develop a pathologic fracture. On the other hand, skeletal metastases that are predominantly osteolytic are rarely seen in prostate carcinoma.9 The authors feel that the osteolytic lesions that are seen in prostate cancer have a higher risk of fracture than osteoblastic metastases. That risk probably approaches that of other osteolytic metastatic cancers, such as breast cancer, lung cancer, and renal cancer. A patient with an impending pathological fracture can be treated with surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or hormonal manipulation. The treatment of a pathologic fracture involves treating the neoplasm while also restoring structural stability; however, treatment of one may effect the treatment of the other. For example radiotherapy and chemotherapy may have adverse effects on the healing bone. For this reason, when postoperative radiotherapy is necessary, endoprosthetic replacements in the femur are the preferred method of surgical stabilization over osteosynthetic devices, because they do not require fracture healing. After surgical reconstruction, the wounds should be allowed to heal at least two weeks before starting radiotherapy or chemotherapy to reduce the risk of infection. The oncologist and the orthopedic surgeon should jointly share postoperative follow-up, as about 25% of these patients will develop another bone metastasis requiring surgical stabilization. In a study performed by Wedin et al, 26 of 228 (11%) procedures for metastatic lesions of long bones led to failures necessitating reoperation. The overall failure rate of metastatic prostate cancer alone was 10%. Of the 26 failures, four were attributable to immediate failures, six to tumor progression, ten to nonunions, five to stress fractures of bone, and one to late dislocation of a humeral megaprosthesis and skin necrosis. Among 54 endoprostheses, only one (2%) patient had a reoperation, while among 162 operations involving osteosynthetic devices 22(14%) were failures. The reoperation rate in radiated fracture sites was 13% versus 10% in nonradiated sites. Five of the six patients who had reoperations for local tumor progression had not received radiotherapy to the fracture site, and eight of ten nonunions had been treated with radiotherapy. Also, all five patients who had a stress fracture had been treated with radiotherapy.9 All of this confirms that endoprostheses have a smaller failure rate that osteosynthetic devices, and that radiation may prevent tumor progression. |
Multiple Myeloma | The presenting symptoms of multiple myeloma are often fatigue and bone pain, but patients may have other symptoms associated with organ failure, such as kidney failure, infection, and anemia. Some patients may have asymptomatic myeloma, where the abnormal cells are present but symptoms and organ damage are not. MM patients may have a normocytic, normochromic anemia secondary to marrow failure and an increased ESR. Hypercalcemia may cause confusion, weakness and lethargy. Other symptoms may include cachexia, spinal cord compression and renal insufficiency. Bacterial infections are common because of a lack of normal immunoglobulin production. Monoclonal immunoglobulin (Ig G)is found on serum electrophoresis and on urinalysis. Immunoglobulin (Ig) is the protein that is produced by the tumor cells. Light chain subunits of immunoglobulin are called Bence Jones proteins and are present in urine. Initial tests include a quantitative assay for Ig, kidney function tests, serum calcium, and a beta-2 microglobulin level. Bone marrow biopsy is required to meaure the percentage of plasma cells in the bone marrow. More than 10% plasma cells is a diagnostic feature of MM. Bone damage is common and can be severe in MM, and a large percentage of patients will develop pathologic fractures. Careful skeletal evaluation and monitoring, as well as close consultation with an orthopedic tumor specialist are recommended. Depletion of bone mineral / calcium levels can lead to severe fracture risk, but can be avoided or minimized with proper care. Bone preservation treatments should be instituted at the earliest possible moment. |
Solitary Myeloma | Pain is the most common symptom. However, if the myeloma occurs in the spine, it will usually present with fast developing paraplegia and gibbous deformity due to the vertebral collapse. |
Myositis Ossificans | Myositis ossificans presents as a rapid enlargement and significant pain one to two weeks after injury. The patient has swelling and warmth at the site as well as an increased ESR and serum alkaline phosphatase. The clinical picture differs from that of osteosarcoma (which is often on the differential as the age groups are the same) as the pain from myositis ossificans decreases as time goes on where osteosarcoma pain increases. Patients are typically not febrile, and do not have systemic symptoms. The pain is localized to the muscle involved. |
Multifocal osteosarcoma | |
Multiple Myeloma | The presenting symptoms of multiple myeloma are often fatigue and bone pain, but patients may have other symptoms associated with organ failure, such as kidney failure, infection, and anemia. Some patients may have asymptomatic myeloma, where the abnormal cells are present but symptoms and organ damage are not. MM patients may have a normocytic, normochromic anemia secondary to marrow failure and an increased ESR. Hypercalcemia may cause confusion, weakness and lethargy. Other symptoms may include cachexia, spinal cord compression and renal insufficiency. Bacterial infections are common because of a lack of normal immunoglobulin production. Monoclonal immunoglobulin (Ig G)is found on serum electrophoresis and on urinalysis. Immunoglobulin (Ig) is the protein that is produced by the tumor cells. Light chain subunits of immunoglobulin are called Bence Jones proteins and are present in urine. Initial tests include a quantitative assay for Ig, kidney function tests, serum calcium, and a beta-2 microglobulin level. Bone marrow biopsy is required to meaure the percentage of plasma cells in the bone marrow. More than 10% plasma cells is a diagnostic feature of MM. Bone damage is common and can be severe in MM, and a large percentage of patients will develop pathologic fractures. Careful skeletal evaluation and monitoring, as well as close consultation with an orthopedic tumor specialist are recommended. Depletion of bone mineral / calcium levels can lead to severe fracture risk, but can be avoided or minimized with proper care. Bone preservation treatments should be instituted at the earliest possible moment. |
Multiple Osteochondromas - Foot and Ankle | A valgus overload of the ankle. |
Multiple Osteochondromas - Foot and Ankle | A valgus overload of the ankle. |
Myositis Ossificans | Myositis ossificans presents as a rapid enlargement and significant pain one to two weeks after injury. The patient has swelling and warmth at the site as well as an increased ESR and serum alkaline phosphatase. The clinical picture differs from that of osteosarcoma (which is often on the differential as the age groups are the same) as the pain from myositis ossificans decreases as time goes on where osteosarcoma pain increases. Patients are typically not febrile, and do not have systemic symptoms. The pain is localized to the muscle involved. |
Neurofibroma | They often arise as superficial painless masses in the dermis. |
Nonossifying Fibroma | Clinically, non-ossifying fibromas are asymptomatic and are usually discovered as an incidental finding on x-ray. Occasionally, a larger lesion presents as a pathologic fracture. The classic scenario is a child who has a minor injury in a sports contest and a plain radiograph is taken in a local emergency room. A lesion is seen and the child is referred to an orthopaedic surgeon for evaluation. Generally, a careful history and physical examination will show that the child's pain is related to the nearby joint rather than the lesion, and that the pattern of the symptoms fits that which is expected in a sprain or strain injury. If there was pain before the injury that seems to arise from the lesion, the diagnosis of NOF is highly suspect. Jaffe-Campanacci syndrome is a constellation of symptoms including multiple non-ossifying fibromas, cafe-au-lait spots, mental retardation, hypogonadism, ocular and cardiovascular abnormalities. |
Non Hodgkin Lymphoma | It may present as local pain or swelling. Patients generally feel they are in good health otherwise. |
Nonossifying Fibroma | Clinically, non-ossifying fibromas are asymptomatic and are usually discovered as an incidental finding on x-ray. Occasionally, a larger lesion presents as a pathologic fracture. The classic scenario is a child who has a minor injury in a sports contest and a plain radiograph is taken in a local emergency room. A lesion is seen and the child is referred to an orthopaedic surgeon for evaluation. Generally, a careful history and physical examination will show that the child's pain is related to the nearby joint rather than the lesion, and that the pattern of the symptoms fits that which is expected in a sprain or strain injury. If there was pain before the injury that seems to arise from the lesion, the diagnosis of NOF is highly suspect. Jaffe-Campanacci syndrome is a constellation of symptoms including multiple non-ossifying fibromas, cafe-au-lait spots, mental retardation, hypogonadism, ocular and cardiovascular abnormalities. |
Ollier's syndrome | The child has abnormal growth, shortening, and deformity of the affected limb. |
Osteoblastoma | Common symptoms are pain of long duration, swelling and tenderness. Tumors of the spine can cause scoliosis and neurological symptoms. The lesion may clinically present with myleopathic and/or radicular symptoms. |
Osteoblastoma - Foot and Ankle |