| Literature DB >> 19918357 |
Raquel Ribeiro Batista1, Edson Marchiori, Tatiana Chinem Takayassu, Fernanda Caseira Cabral, Rafael Ferracini Cabral, Gláucia Zanetti.
Abstract
Renal cell carcinoma accounts for 85% of all solid renal tumors in adults. Nearly one quarter of patients has distant metastasis at presentation while another 50% develop metastasis during follow-up. A small percentage of these are solitary metastasis. We report here a case of solitary bone sternal metastasis as an initial presentation of clear-cell renal cell carcinoma in a 56-year-old woman. The prognosis for patients with metastasized renal cell carcinoma is poor; treatment of metastasis is usually palliative and designed to provide comfort and pain relief. Palliative nephrectomy may be considered for control of symptoms. Radical nephrectomy associated with metastatic bone tumor resection is being tested to improve functional status and survival, especially when metastasis involves supporting bones.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19918357 PMCID: PMC2769487 DOI: 10.4076/1757-1626-2-9045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cases J ISSN: 1757-1626
Figure 1.Metastatic bone disease. Bone scintigram shows uptake in the sternal body.
Figure 2.Thoracic CT scan showing soft-tissue mass in the sternum.
Figure 3.Abdominal CT scan demonstrating a left-sided mass in a 56-year-old woman. The mass was well-defined, exophytic-appearing to arise from the cortex—and heterogeneously and avidly enhancing. (A) Corticomedullary and (B) Nephrographic phases show typical hypervascularity of the tumor. (C) Coronal and (D) Sagittal multiplanar reformatation during excretory phase.