| Literature DB >> 19664211 |
Eira S Roth1, David T Fetzer, Bruce J Barron, Usha A Joseph, Isis W Gayed, David Q Wan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well recognized that colorectal cancer does not frequently metastasize to bone. The aim of this retrospective study was to establish whether colorectal cancer ever bypasses other organs and metastasizes directly to bone and whether the presence of lung lesions is superior to liver as a better predictor of the likelihood and timing of bone metastasis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19664211 PMCID: PMC2734866 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-9-274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Demographic information of the survey population
| Age (mean ± SD) | 64.2 year ± 11 |
| Initially staged as I to III | 216/252 (86) |
| Initially staged as IV | 36/252 (14) |
| Primary cancer surgery | 206/231 (89) |
| Adjuvant radiation therapy | 55/231 (23.8)1 |
| Adjuvant chemotherapy | 195/231 (84.4)1 |
| Total metastasis to liver, lung, or bone | 102/252 (40) |
SD = Standard deviation
1 The denominator is the 21 patients seen only for initial staging subtracted from the total number of patients.
Colorectal cancer organ metastases in certain criteria
| Liver | 75/252 (30) | 21/75 (28) | 42/75 (56) | 48/75 (64) |
| Lung | 63/252 (25) | 4/63 (6.3) | 49/63 (77.8) | 23/63 (36.5) |
| Bone | 14/252 (5.5) | 1/14 (7.1) | 14/14 (100) | 0/14 (0) |
Average time (months) to organ metastasis in metastatic colon cancer patients
| Liver metastasis | 9.8 ± 14.9 | 54 |
| Lung metastasis | 23.3 ± 25.32 | 59 |
| Bone metastasis | 21.2 ± 18.52 | 13 |
| From liver metastasis to bone metastasis | 8.3 ± 13.4 | 12 |
| From lung metastasis to bone metastasis | 3.3 ± 4.23 | 10 |
SD = standard deviation.
1 Patients with only 1 scan are not included in these calculations.
2 A significant difference (unpaired Student t test, P < 0.05) was found when the time to metastasis from the colon to the lung or bone was compared with the time to metastasis from the colon to the liver.
3 No significant difference (P > 0.05) was found when the time from lung metastasis to bone metastasis was compared with the time from liver metastasis to bone metastasis.
Figure 1Bone scan posterior view of a 54-year-old woman with a 2-year history of recurrent colon cancer revealed a focal tracer uptake in the right sacroiliac joint area suggesting possible bone metastasis.
Figure 2FDG PET/CT scan of the same patient in Figure 1 revealed no focally increased FDG uptake or suspicious abnormalities to bone on the CT of the right sacroiliac area to correspond the bone scan findings (short arrows). The patient's history of pelvic fracture probably explained the focal tracer uptake in bone scan. The recurrent colon cancer in the left pelvis observed by both PET and CT scans is marked by the long arrows.