| Literature DB >> 24716042 |
Geetika Bhatt1, Aashish Bhatt2, Anthony E Dragun3, Xiao-Feng Li4, A Cahid Civelek4.
Abstract
Osteonecrosis of the jaw is usually a potential complication of bisphosphonate therapy. In a cancer patient, this disease entity can be misdiagnosed as a metastatic lesion. Our aim is to make clinicians aware of bisphosphonate associated osteonecrosis of the jaw to prevent misdiagnosis and initiate proper treatment at the earliest. We present the case of a breast cancer patient with multiple bony metastases and a jaw lesion presumed to be metastases. After no response to palliative radiation, repeat radiological imaging studies revealed osteonecrosis of the jaw. Correlating a patient's clinical information with findings on diagnostic imaging studies, such as SPECT bone and CT scans, can help identify this potential complication of bisphosphonate treatment. Early diagnosis helps minimize unnecessary biopsies and allows for the proper treatment to be instituted.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24716042 PMCID: PMC3970248 DOI: 10.1155/2014/281812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1CT scan of the mandible. The CT scan demonstrates thickening of the mandibular body (arrow) with adjacent tissue stranding. This was thought to represent metastatic disease.
Figure 2Technetium 99m Bone scintigraphy. Bone scan showing increased radioactive uptake in the body of the mandible (arrow) thought to be metastatic disease.
Figure 3Repeat CT scan of the mandible. Repeat CT scan of the mandible showed changes along the external and internal surface of the mandible (arrow) with production of new bone along the body extending to the mandibular angle thought to be secondary to osteonecrosis from the radiation therapy.
Figure 4Repeat Technetium 99m bone scintigraphy. Progression of diffuse intense bony radioactivity involving most of the mandible, most likely related to diphosphonate induced mandibular osteonecrosis.
AAOMS staging system of BRONJ.
| Stage | Clinical findings | Treatment recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 0 | (i) Nonspecific | Systemic management, including pain medication and antibiotics |
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| Stage I | Exposed, necrotic bone | (i) Antibacterial mouth rinse |
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| Stage II | (i) Painful | (i) Oral antibiotics |
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| Stage III | (i) Painful | (i) Antibacterial mouth rinse |