| Literature DB >> 25726410 |
Andrea Piccioli1, Giulio Maccauro, Maria Silvia Spinelli, Roberto Biagini, Barbara Rossi.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Metastases are the most common malignancies involving bone; breast, prostate, lung and thyroid are the main sites of primary cancer. However, up to 30 % of patients present with bone metastases of unknown origin, where the site of the primary neoplasm cannot be identified at the time of diagnosis despite a thorough history, physical examination, appropriate laboratory testing and modern imaging technology (CT, MRI, PET). Sometimes only extensive histopathological investigations on bone specimens from biopsy can suggest the primary malignancy. At other times, a bone lesion can have such a highly undifferentiated histological appearance that a precise pathological classification on routine hematoxylin-eosin-stained section is not possible. The authors reviewed the relevant literature in an attempt to investigate the epidemiology of the histological primaries finally identified in patients with bone metastases from occult cancer, and a strategy of management and treatment of bone metastases from occult carcinomas is suggested. Lung, liver, pancreas and gastrointestinal tract are common sites for primary occult tumors. Adenocarcinoma is the main histological type, accounting for 70 % of all cases, while undifferentiated cancer accounts for 20 %. Over the past 30 years, lung cancer is the main causative occult primary for bone metastases and has a poor prognosis with an average survival of 4-8 months. Most relevant literature focuses on the need for standardized diagnostic workup, as surgery for bone lesions should be aggressive only when they are solitary and/or the occult primaries have a good prognosis; in these cases, identification of the primary tumor may be important and warrants special diagnostic efforts. However, in most cases, the primary site remains unknown, even after autopsy. Thus, orthopedic surgery has a mainly palliative role in preventing or stabilizing pathological fractures, relieving pain and facilitating the care of the patient in an attempt to provide the most appropriate therapy for the primary tumor as soon as possible. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 5.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25726410 PMCID: PMC4441638 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-015-0344-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Review of the literature on case distribution and primaries identified in bone metastases of unknown origin
| Authors | BMUO at diagnosis | Identified PC | Main PC | PC in order of frequency | Occult PC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simon and Karluk [ | 12 | 6 | Kidney 3 (50 %) | Kidney (3), lung (2), others (1) | 6 (50 %) |
| Simon and Bartucci [ | 46 | 20 | Lung 7 (35 %) | Lung (7), kidney (6), breast = prostate (2), ovarian = thyroid = liver (1) | 26 (56 %) |
| Nottebaert et al. [ | 51 | 33 | Lung 17 (51 %) | Lung (17), others (16) | 18 (35 %) |
| Shih et al. [ | 52 | 28 | Lung 9 (32 %) | Lung (9), liver (8), kidney (5), prostate (3), thyroid (2), rectum (1) | 24 (46 %) |
| Rougraff et al. [ | 40 | 34 | Lung 23 (67 %) | Lung (23), kidney (4), breast = colon = liver = bladder (1), others (3) | 6 (15 %) |
| Jacobsen et al. [ | 29 | 24 | Lung 11 (46 %) | Lung (11), prostate (3), breast = lymphomas (2), kidney = ovary = pancreas = stomach = small intestine carcinoid = retroperitoneal rhabdomyosarcoma (1) | 5 (17 %) |
| Katagiri et al. [ | 64 | 59 | Lung 23 (39 %) | Lung (23), prostate (11), breast = liver (5), others (15) | 5 (8 %) |
| Vandecandelaere et al. [ | 129 | 84 | Lung 36 (43 %) | Lung (36), prostate (17), kidney (15), breast (9), stomach (2), bladder = colon = testis = pancreas = liver (1) | 45 (35 %) |
| Destombe et al. [ | 107 | 94 | Lung 37 (39 %) | Lung (37), prostate (26), breast (20), bladder (11) | 13 (12 %) |
| Iizuka et al. [ | 27 | 26 | Myeloma 7 (27 %) | Myeloma (7), lymphoma (3), lung (6), prostate (4), kidney = thyroid = liver = pancreas = stomach = esophagus (1) | 1 (4 %) |
| Hemminki et al. [ | 501 | 256 | Lung 128 (50 %) | Lung (128), urinary (29), prostate (16), breast (14), colon (12), pancreas = gastrointestinal (10), liver (9), biliary system (4), stomach (3), mediastinum (2), ovarian (1), others (18) | 203 (40 %) |
BMUO bone metastases of unknown origin, PC primary carcinoma
Fig. 1Schematic indications for treatment of patients with bone metastases from occult primary tumor