Metastatic
Tumors In Bone
Metastatic tumors are cancers that started in another location and spread
to the bones. More than 90% of all these metastatic lesions in
bone are caused by a small number of primary tumors all of which are
listed below. Patients with metastatic bone tumors do not need
to lose hope, because new treatments and new hope is available. One
new technique is the aggressive removal of the metastatic lesions for
maximum functional restoration. (more)
Make sure you or your loved one is receiving the most thorough care
appropriate for the bone tumor problem they have.
Bone is
the third most common site of metastatic disease. Cancers
most likely to metastasize to bone include breast,
lung, prostate,
thyroid and kidney. Carcinomas are much more
likely to metastasize to bone than sarcomas. The axial skeleton is seeded
more than the appendicular skeleton, partly due to the persistence of
red bone marrow in the former. The ribs, pelvis and spine are normally
the first bones involved and distal bones
are rarely affected. Metastases are established when a single tumor
cell or a clump of cells gain access to the blood stream, reach the
bone marrow through blood vessels in Haversian canals, extravasate,
multiply and neovascularize. Batson's vertebral venous plexus allows
cells to enter the vertebral circulation without first passing through
the lungs. The sluggish blood flow in this plexus is more conducive
to tumor survival, accounting for the high rate of prostate cancer metastasis
to the spine.
Pain, pathological fractures and hypercalcemia are the major sources
of morbidity with bone metastasis. Pain is the most common symptom found
in 70% of patients with bone metastases. l Pain is caused by stretching
of the periosteum by the tumor as well as nerve stimulation in the endosteum.
Pathological fractures are most common in breast cancer due to the lytic
nature of the lesions. They are uncommon in lung cancer due to short
life span and rare in prostate cancer which tend to be osteoblastic
lesions. Hypercalcemia only occurs in 10% of patients.2
Lytic bone metastases must be greater than 1 cm and have destroyed 30-50%
of the bone density 3 in order to be seen by x-ray. It is also difficult
to distinguish between metastases and benign lesions such as Paget's
disease or osteoporosis on plain film. On bone scan, radiolabeled bisphosphonates
are taken up by in areas of bone formation but not by the tumor cells.
CT is more specific than bone scan and can distinguish between osteolytic
and osteoblastic lesions. MRI is the most sensitive method of detection
bone metastases because cells can spotted before local bone reaction
has occurred.
Metastatic bone lesions can be described as osteolytic, osteoblastic
and mixed. The osteolytic lesions are most common where the destructive
processes outstrip the laying down of new bone. New treatments with
medicines that may block bone lysis by tumor cells are currently in
clinical trials. Osteoblastic lesions result from new bone growth that
is stimulated by the tumor. Microscopically, most lesions are mixed.
Treatment for bone metastasis is normally palliative. An assessment
of the risk of pathological fracture must
be made by an experienced orthopaedic surgeon. Lesions that do not represent
a risk for fracture may be treated with radiation or by appropriate
chemotherapy directed at the tumor. Lesions that are regarded as a risk
for pathologic fracture should be surgically stabilized on an elective
basis before a fracture occurs. The goals of surgery are to preserve
stability and function of the musculoskeletal system as well as alleviate
pain. Emergency surgery is done for spinal metastasis in the hope of
preserving neurological function.
l Vinholes, J. et al., Effects of Bone Metastases on Bone Metabolism:
Implications for Diagnosis, Imaging and Assessment of Response to Cancer
Treatment, Cancer Treatment Reviews 22:289-331, 1996. 2 Stoll,
B. and Parbhoo, S., Bone Metastasis, Raven Press Books, Ltd.:New
York, NY, 1983, p. 14. 3 Vinholes, et al. 1/14/98 8:46 AM 1