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 Malignant bone tumours

1. METASTATIC BONE TUMOURS

  • Most common cause of bone malignancy is metastasis from a primary tumour elsewhere in the body
  • Most common primary sites – breast, prostate, lung, kidney, bowel and thyroid
  • Sites most affected – vertebrae, ribs, pelvis, humerus, femur

Normal bone metabolism

  • Three components of osteoclast metabolism are OPG, RANKL and RANK
    • RANKL activates RANK – expands the pool of osteoclasts, leading to increased bone resorption
    • OPG neutralises RANK – diminishes the pool of osteoclasts, leading to decreased bone resorption
  • RANKL and OPG are regulated by various cytokines, hormones and drugs
    • M-CSF, IL-1, TNF-α, IL-6

Pathophysiology

Osteolytic lesions

  • Skeletal malignancies disrupt the OPG-RANKL-RANK signal transduction pathway
    • Promote enhanced osteoclast formation and therefore accelerate bone resorption
  • When breast cancer cells migrate to bone there is an overproduction of PTHrP (parathyroid hormone-related peptide) – activates osteoblasts to produce RANKL and downregulate OPG
    • Leads to production of osteoclasts – causing osteolysis
    • This causes increases levels of bone-derived growth factors (TGF-β, IGF-1) and extracellular calcium
    • Creates a vicious cycle where interactions between tumour cells and osteoclasts leads to increased osteoclastogenesis and also aggressive growth and behaviour of tumour cells

Osteoblastic lesions

  • More common in prostate and small cell lung cancer
  • Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) can cleave PTHrP – allows the osteoblastic reaction to predominate by decreasing bone reabsorption
  • Associated with secretion of endothelin-1

Clinical features

  • Pain – usually worse at night
  • Pathologic fracture – in absence of trauma
  • Systemic symptoms – weight loss, anorexia, fever
  • Symptoms of hypercalcemia – nausea, vomiting, constipation, confusion

Diagnosis

  • Tc99 bone scan – shows ‘hot’ areas at sites of metastases
  • X-ray
  • CT/MRI
  • Bloods
    • High serum ALP
    • Hypercalcemia
    • High PSA in prostatic metastases

Treatment

  • Identify the primary site if unknown
  • Analgesia
  • Prevention of pathologic fracture
  • Radiotherapy
  • Chemotherapy

2. PRIMARY BONE TUMOURS

Mutliple Myeloma

  • Monoclonal proliferation of plasma cells which produces abnormal paraproteins (Ig light chain)

Epidemiology

  • Most common primary bone malignancy
  • More common in males
  • Median age of patients is 60 years

Pathophysiology

  • Malignant plasma cells cause stimulation of osteoclast activity
  • Plasma cells bind bone marrow stromal cells – stimulate production of RANKL and other pro-osteoclastic mediators (M-CSF, IL-6, TNF)
  • OPG synthesis is suppressed, resulting in further osteoclast activation

Clinical features

  • Localised bone pain – spine or rib pain most common
  • Pathologic fracture
  • Fatigue

Diagnosis

  • Diagnostic criteria – monoclonal plasma cells ≥10% on bone marrow biopsy and ≥1 of CRAB
    • Hypercalcemia
    • Renal insufficiency
    • Anemia
    • Bone lesions
  • Urine – Bence-Jones proteinuria
  •  X-ray – multiple ‘punched-out’ lytic lesions
  • MRI
  • PET scan – most sensitive

Treatment

  • Radiation
  • Chemo – melphalan, prednisone, thalidomide
  • Surgical stabilisation – for impending fracture

Osteosarcoma

  • Malignant tumour of the mesenchymal cells, characterised by formation of osteoid or bone by the tumour cells

Epidemiology

  • Primary osteosarcoma is most common in younger patients – 10-20 years old
    • Slight male preponderance
    • Most common sites – distal femur, tibia, humerus
  • Secondary osteosarcoma is more common in the elderly

Etiology

  • No known etiology for primary osteosarcoma
  • Secondary osteosarcoma
    • Paget’s disease of the bone , history of radiotherapy/chemotherapy, bone infarcts, chronic osteomyelitis
    • Inherited conditions – familial retinoblastoma syndrome, Li-Fraumeni syndrome

Classification

  • Primary osteosarcoma
    • Conventional-intramedullary – osteoblastic, chondroblastic, fibroblastic
    • Small cell
    • Telangiectatic
    • Surface osteosarcomas – parosteal, periosteal, high grade surface
  • Secondary osteosarcomas

Pathophysiology

  • Rapid bone growth (i.e. in adolescent growth spurt) is associated with increased risk of osteosarcoma
  • Mutations in p53 and Rb genes are implicated

Clinical features

  • Localised pain – worsens over weeks
    • Deep and dull in characteristic
  • Swelling
  • Limited range of motion
  • Limp
  • Overlying skin ulceration – uncommon

Diagnosis

  • X-ray – neoplasm usually located in metaphysis of long bone
    • Poorly circumscribed lesion with mixed radio-dense and radiolucent areas
    • Codman triangle – a triangular area of new subperiosteal bone that is created when a tumour raises the periosteum away from the bone
    • Sunburst appearance
  • CT/MRI
  • Tc99 bone scan
  • Bone biopsy
  • Bloods – raised ALP and LDH

Treatment

  • Chemotherapy – methotrexate, doxorubicin, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide
  • Radiotherapy
  • Surgery – limb salvage resection, amputation

Chondrosarcoma

  • Malignant primary bone tumour composed of chondrocytes – variable degrees of malignancy

Epidemiology

  • Older patients, slight male preponderance
  • Most common sites – pelvis, femur, scapula

Etiology/classification

  • Primary chondrosarcoma – unknown etiology
    • Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma
    • Clear cell chondrosarcoma
    • Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma
  • Secondary chondrosarcoma – arises from benign cartilage lesions
    • E.g. osteochondroma, Enchondroma , Ollier’s disease , Maffucci’s syndrome

Clinical features

  • Pain
  • Slow growing mass
  • Symptoms of bowel/bladder obstruction due to mass effect
  • Pathologic fracture

Diagnosis

  • X-ray – lytic or blastic lesion with reactive thickening of cortex
    • Intralesional calcifications
    • Moth-eaten appearance – in high grade tumours
  • CT – endosteal scalloping; calcifications
  • MRI
  • Tc99 bone scan

Treatment

  • Chemotherapy
  • Intra-lesional curettage – for low grade lesions
  • Wide surgical excision
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