Gamage Supun, Mohamed Jiffry Mohamed Zakee, Sriharan Parathan, Velayuthum Swarnakumar, Gunawardana Thanuka
Orthopedic Surgery, National Hospital, Colombo, LKA.
Internal Medicine, Danbury Hospital, Danbury, USA.
Cureus. 2023 Mar 29;15(3):e36855. doi: 10.7759/cureus.36855. eCollection 2023 Mar.
When considering tumors of the bone, metastatic disease from a distant primary is more common than primary tumors of the bone itself. The commonest sites to which skeletal metastasis occur are in the axial skeleton, and with regard to the appendicular skeleton, metastasis to the forearm bones is uncommon. Almost a third of patients who present with skeletal metastases do not have any evidence of their primary tumor at presentation. We report a case of a 68-year-old female diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma after presenting with metastatic deposits involving the right radius as the first clinical manifestation of her disease. She presented initially complaining of painful swelling of her right forearm for a duration of one year. Imaging investigations of her right forearm showed an expansile mixed lytic and sclerotic lesion involving the full length of the right radius. A contrast-enhanced computed tomography scan of her chest to investigate the possible site of primary malignancy showed a peripherally located, well-defined, irregularly shaped mass lesion with enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes. A fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) bone scan also noted oligometastatic disease in her right proximal humerus. She was started on palliative docetaxel for six cycles with palliative external beam radiotherapy. Although a variety of tumors metastasize to the bone, metastasis to the appendicular skeleton, and in particular the forearm bones, is a rare phenomenon that is poorly described in the existing literature. Skeletal metastasis may also be the primary presenting feature in a minority of cases. Lung cancer is among the more commonly associated primary sites, and further workup should include appropriate imaging to evaluate for a lung primary as well as an FDG-PET/CT or a bone scan to detect occult metastatic disease.
在考虑骨肿瘤时,远处原发灶的转移性疾病比骨本身的原发性肿瘤更为常见。骨骼转移最常见的部位是中轴骨骼,而就四肢骨骼而言,转移至前臂骨并不常见。几乎三分之一出现骨骼转移的患者在初诊时没有其原发肿瘤的任何证据。我们报告一例68岁女性病例,该患者以累及右桡骨的转移性病灶为疾病的首发临床表现,后被诊断为肺腺癌。她最初因右前臂疼痛性肿胀就诊,症状持续了一年。对其右前臂进行的影像学检查显示,右桡骨全长有一个膨胀性的溶骨性与硬化性混合病灶。对其胸部进行的增强计算机断层扫描以探究可能的原发恶性肿瘤部位,结果显示有一个位于周边、边界清晰、形状不规则的肿块病灶,伴有纵隔淋巴结肿大。氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描(FDG-PET)骨扫描还发现其右肱骨近端有寡转移病灶。她开始接受六个周期的姑息性多西他赛治疗,并接受姑息性外照射放疗。尽管多种肿瘤可转移至骨,但转移至四肢骨骼,尤其是前臂骨,是一种罕见现象,现有文献对此描述甚少。在少数情况下,骨骼转移也可能是主要的临床表现。肺癌是较为常见的相关原发部位之一,进一步的检查应包括适当的影像学检查以评估肺部原发灶,以及进行FDG-PET/CT或骨扫描以检测隐匿性转移性疾病。