Bone and Soft Tissue Tumours Flashcards
What are suspicious clinical features which indicate there could be a malignant tumour?
- Pathological Fractures
-
Bony swellings - Hard, fixed, craggy surface, indistinct margins
- Deep tumour (of any size) or Subcutaneous tumours > 5cm
- Non-mechanical bone pain - Non-tender, but assoc. with deep ache, esp. WORSE AT NIGHT
- Recurred after previous excision
What investigations would you perform if you suspected a bone tumour?
Complete work up
- Bloods
- X-rays of affected Limb & Chest
- MRI of lesion
- Bone Scan
- CT Chest, abdo & pelvis
What features on an x-ray would suggest an inactive bone lesion?
- Clear margins
- Surrounding rim of reactive bone
What features on an X-ray would suggest an aggressive bone lesion?
- Less well defined margins - between normal and abnormal bone
- Cortical destruction ⇒ malignancy
- Periosteal reactive new bone growth - occurs when the lesion destroys the cortex
- Codman’s triangle
- Onion-skinning
- Sunburst pattern
What can be determined using CT scan when investigating bone tumours?
- Assessing ossification and calcification
- Integrity of cortex
- Best for assessing nidus in osteoid osteoma
What can be determined using an Isotope bone scan when investigating bone tumours?
- Staging for skeletal metastasis
-
Multiple lesions
- Osteochondroma
- Enchondroma
- Fibrous Dysplasia + histiocytosis
- Uptake from benign lesions
What can be determined when using an MRI Scan when investigating bone/soft tissue tumours?
- Size, extent, anatomical relationships
- Accurate for measuring limits of disease - within and outside bone
- Specific - Lipoma, haemangioma, haematoma or PVNS.
- Non-specific - benign vs. malignant
What is one of the main uses of a PET scans for bone/soft tissue tissue tumours?
Response to chemotherapy
What is an osteosarcoma?
- Aggressive primary malignant neoplasm - 2nd most common to multiple myeloma
- Arises from primitive transformed cells of mesenchymal origin
- Produces malignant osteoid
Who does osteosarcoma most commonly affect?
- Adolescents - age 10-20 yrs - most common primary malignant tumour in Children
- Males>Females
- Those with Paget’s Disease
Where does osteosarcoma most commonly affect?
- Distal femur > proximal tibia > proximal humerus > proximal femur > distal tibia
What are the clinical features of osteosarcoma?
- Pain - progressive, deep seated, boring, WORSE AT NIGHT
- Deep swelling - near end of long bone, warmth over site + venous congestion
- Loss of function
- Limp/difficulty weight bearing
- Pathological fracture
- Systemic - Malaise, Fatigue, WL
What investigations would you do to investigate for suspected osteosarcoma?
- X-rays - Codman’s triangle, sunburst spiculation, mixed sclerotic/lytic lesion with indistinct margins
- MRI Scan - INVESTIGATION OF CHOICE
- HRCT Scan - chest mets
How would you treat osteosarcoma?
- Chemotherapy
-
Surgery
- Limb salvage possible for most cases
- Consider neurovascular involvement
- Pathological fractures
- Poorly performed biopsy
- Radiotherapy
What are the most common types of cancer to cause bone metastases?
Try to list in order of most common to least common
- LUNG
- BREAST
- PROSTATE
- KIDNEY
- THYROID
- GI TRACT
- MELANOMA