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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (
bone metastases
)
6,382
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Breast cancer is the most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women in developed countries. Bone is a frequent site of metastatic disease with a stage-dependent incidence. Most women with breast cancer are at risk of osteoporosis due to their age or their breast cancer treatment. Scintigraphy enables imaging of the entire skeleton with high sensitivity but limited specificity. The false positive rate varies from 1.6% to as high as 22%, while the false negative rate varies from 0.96% to 13%. We observed a 70-year-old woman with a diagnosis of breast cancer and a false negative bone scan despite extensive
bone metastases
. She was under alendronate treatment for osteoporosis at the time. The false negative finding might be due to a transient phenomenon of alendronate, a bisphosphonate cleared from the plasma by uptake into bone and by renal excretion. 99mTc-MDP is eliminated via the same pathways, and therefore competition may occur between the two substances. Another possible explanation for the false negative bone scan could be that
bone metastases
, indicating hematogenous tumor spread, are detected earlier by CT scan or
MRI
than by bone scan. Breast cancer patients under bisphosphonate treatment for osteoporosis must be carefully evaluated for bone metastasis during radionuclide studies with 99mTc-MDP.
...
PMID:False negative bone scintigraphy in a patient with primary breast cancer: a possible transient phenomenon of bisphosphonate (alendronate) treatment. 1585 10
Hepatic angiosarcoma is a rare malignant vascular tumor that accounts for up to 2% of all primary liver tumors. Accurate diagnosis of this tumor is difficult, especially if the patient has no history of exposure to specific carcinogens including thorotrast, arsenicals, and vinyl chloride monomer. Diagnosis of diffuse angiosarcoma by means of liver biopsy has been reported as treacherous and nondiagnostic. Herein, we present a case of a 61-year-old Caucasian male with history of cryptogenic cirrhosis, normal alpha-fetoprotein, and pretransplant abnormal liver
MRI
who underwent nondiagnostic liver biopsies followed by liver transplantation. High grade diffuse angiosarcoma was diagnosed in the explanted liver. The patient developed
bone metastases
at 8 months and is alive 1 year posttransplantation. Diffuse liver tissue infiltration seen pretransplant on CT scan or
MRI
, suggesting the possibility of diffuse liver lesions (HCC, angiosarcoma, etc) must be fully investigated with all techniques available including multiple open liver biopsies to avoid the sacrifice of a liver allograft in these patients.
...
PMID:Hepatic angiosarcoma and liver transplantation: case report and literature review. 1596 77
Bone scintigraphy is sensitive for detecting
bone metastases
in patients with malignancies. However, it is often difficult to differentiate
bone metastases
from other nonmalignant lesions. We encountered a patient with a history of breast cancer who showed substantial elevation of tumor markers 4 years after surgery. Although there were no subjective symptoms and the bone scan showed multiple hot spots, which were similar to previous scans and which had been diagnosed as fibrous dysplasia on radiographs, a whole-body FDG PET scan showed a solitary area of intense uptake at the site of one of the hot spots in the bone scan. A solitary bone metastasis was confirmed by
MRI
and the patient then received radiation therapy and the elevated tumor markers of CEA and CA 15-3 were normalized after the therapy.
...
PMID:Bone metastasis detected by FDG PET in a patient with breast cancer and fibrous dysplasia. 1602 60
Bone metastasis causes significant morbidity in cancer patients, including bone pain, pathologic fractures, nerve compression syndrome, and hypercalcemia. Animal models are utilized to study the pathogenesis of skeletal metastases and to evaluate potential therapeutic agents. Previously published methods for imaging bone metastasis in rodent models have focused on identifying advanced stage metastasis using simple X-rays. Here we report
MRI
as a method for detecting early
bone metastases
in mouse models in vivo. B16 mouse melanoma cells were injected into the left cardiac ventricle of C57BL/6 mice and magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained of the left leg following the development of metastatic disease, when tumor associated bone destruction was histologically present but not visible by X-ray. T1 and T2 relaxation times of bone marrow were measured in healthy control mice and B16 melanoma tumor-bearing mice. Mean T2 values for normal marrow were 28 ms (SD 5) and for diseased bone marrow were 41 ms (SD 3). T2 relaxation time of diseased bone marrow is significantly longer than that of normal bone marrow (P < 0.0001) and can be used as a marker of early
bone metastases
. These studies demonstrate that MR imaging can detect bone marrow metastases in small animals prior to development of cortical bone loss identified by X-ray.
...
PMID:MRI detection of early bone metastases in b16 mouse melanoma models. 1628 83
Gastric carcinoma is the third most common gastrointestinal (GI) malignancy after colon and pancreatic carcinoma. A Japanese study showed that the incidence of
bone metastases
of gastric cancer was 13.4% among autopsies. It is very rare for the primary presentation of a gastric malignancy to be with
bone metastases
. This case report is of a 46-year-old female patient, who presented with a thoracic vertebral wedge fracture and was subsequently found to have widespread vertebral metastatic deposits with marrow infiltration. The infiltration and suppression of marrow function was complicated by an acute bleed into the extradural space causing spinal cord compression. This case demonstrates two important features. First, that gastric cancer, although far less common than breast, kidney, thyroid, prostate and bronchial cancer, is a cause of metastases to bone. Second, it highlights the complications of
bone metastases
, marrow suppression, leukoerythroblastic anaemia, spinal canal haematoma and cord compression. The case is illustrated by axial and sagittal
MRI
slices.
...
PMID:Gastric carcinoma presenting with extensive bone metastases and marrow infiltration causing extradural spinal haemorrhage. 1649 42
A case in which radiotherapy was requested for
bone metastases
from prostate carcinoma after hormonal and radiation therapy and diagnosed as insufficiency fracture of the sacrum on bone scan was reported. A 78-year-old man underwent endocrine therapy with luteinizing hormone releasing hormone agonists and radical radiotherapy toward pelvis for prostate cancer. The onset of buttock pain started from the nine-month after the beginning of radiotherapy, and was diagnosed as sacrum metastasis by
MRI
, and radiotherapy was requested again for pain control. However, on bone scan, butterfly-like changed accumulation was noted, therefore sacrum insufficiency fracture was suspected. Addition of CT inspection and reconfirmation of
MRI
were performed, and
bone metastases
became negative, and serial observation was performed of the painkilling effect after that. No tumor marker rise was seen after five months without sigh of new
bone metastases
and the final diagnosis became insufficient fracture. In order to avoid unnecessary treatment, we think that the view of bone scintigram for diagnosis of sacrum insufficient fracture should be known.
...
PMID:[Insufficiency fracture of the sacrum after hormonal therapy and radiotherapy for prostate cancer: A case in which 99mTc-MDP bone scintigraphy was useful for differential diagnosis]. 1650 48
Imaging is a critical component of diagnosis, staging and monitoring, all of which factor heavily in treatment decision-making for cancer patients. Agents, such as antibodies, can target molecules that are relatively unique to cancer cells. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is the most well-established, highly restricted prostate-cancer-related cell membrane antigen known. Ten years ago, the FDA approved (111)In-capromab pendetide for use in imaging soft-tissue, but not bone, sites of metastatic prostate cancer for presurgical staging or the evaluation of PSA relapse after local therapy. For presurgical patients with high-risk disease but negative bone, CT and
MRI
scans, capromab demonstrated the ability to identify some patients with positive nodes, thereby sparing them an unnecessary surgical procedure. But there have been no follow-up studies to indicate that high-risk patients with a negative capromab scan have a lower failure rate after surgery. In the setting of PSA relapse, capromab is compromised by its inability to sensitively image
bone metastases
; bone is the first site of metastatic prostate cancer in 72% of patients. The problem with imaging
bone metastases
is that capromab detects an antigenic site on the intracellular portion of PSMA-a site not accessible to circulating antibodies. Early results indicate that second-generation antibodies that target the extracellular domain of PSMA might provide significant benefits in the imaging of prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Technology insight: monoclonal antibody imaging of prostate cancer. 1660 70
Bony metastasis
is a rare feature of metastatic nonseminomatous germ cell tumor. A 25 year-old man presented with back pain radiating down both legs, and a subsequent work-up demonstrated a right-sided testicular mass with bilateral retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy and tumor involvement of the L2 vertebra. Radical inguinal orchiectomy confirmed nonseminomatous germ cell tumor, and the patient underwent chemotherapy with a residual mass and vertebral involvement by
MRI
. Combined vertebral resection with spinal reconstruction and retroperitoneal lymph node dissection demonstrated residual fibrosis. While bony metastasis of nonseminomatous germ cell tumors is rare, resection with spinal reconstruction can be accomplished with acceptable morbidity.
...
PMID:Nonseminomatous germ cell tumor after chemotherapy with residual mass invading the spine. 1662 60
Malignancy (defined as metastatic disease) has been reported in nearly 5% of head and neck paragangliomas. Metastases preferentially target the lymph nodes, lung, liver, or bone. We describe three patients with multiple silent
bone metastases
exhibiting a fatty halo at
MRI
that coexisted with expansive bone lesions. In all cases, (123)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine ((123)MIBG) scintigraphy showed no abnormal tracer uptake, whereas (111)In-pentetreotide scintigraphy visualized a few silent
bone metastases
. These findings indicate that
MRI
should be included in the staging of paraganglioma patients with risk factors for malignancy.
...
PMID:Bone metastases from head and neck paragangliomas: uncommon MR findings in an uncommon condition--report of three cases. 1678 69
Samarium-153 lexidronam (153Sm-EDTMP) is FDA approved for painful osteoblastic
bone metastases
that image on bone scan. 153Sm-EDTMP decay has a therapeutic beta-emission and a gamma-photon for bone scan imaging. Monitoring of osteosarcoma radiation treatment effectiveness was performed with bone, CT,
MRI
and PET/CT fusion imaging. Bone scan and PET/CT improved in 5 out of 9 and 16 out of 18 osteosarcoma sites, respectively. 153Sm-EDTMP targets multiple sites of disease, with a single administration. Side effects of 153Sm-EDTMP (0.5-2.5 mCi/kg) have been minimal and include transient thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. 153Sm-EDTMP can be combined with radiation therapy, bisphosphonates and/or chemotherapy to synergistically improve palliation. This article reviews the rationale, indications and monitoring of standard-dose samarium and investigational high-dose 153Sm-EDTMP treatment of cancer involving bone.
...
PMID:Samarium for osteoblastic bone metastases and osteosarcoma. 1685 31
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