Malignant bone tumors: Difference between revisions

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| Primary bone lymphoma||Adult > 40 years of age with bone pain or pathologic fracture||Bone destruction; soft tissue mass||5 year survival is greater than 50% with radiation and chemotherapy
| Primary bone lymphoma||Adult > 40 years of age with bone pain or pathologic fracture||Bone destruction; soft tissue mass||5 year survival is greater than 50% with radiation and chemotherapy
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==See Also==
*[[Benign bone tumors]]


==References==
==References==
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Revision as of 23:22, 21 November 2019

Differential Diagnosis[1]

Name Presentation Radiograph Findings Clinical Importance
Adamantinoma Bone pain over anterior tibia in adolescent or young adult Soap bubble osteolytic appearance on plain radiograph Metastasis to lungs; may need amputation
Chordoma Constant pain if in sacrum; neurological deficits if at base of skull, most commonly in cranial nerves to the eye Plain radiograph will show a destructive bone lesion often with an associated soft tissue mass Slow growing but locally aggressive; metastasis is uncommon, local recurrence is much more likely
Fibrosarcoma and Undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma Similar to osteosarcoma except malignant fibroblasts but less common Most common in distal femur and proximal tibia Similar outcome to osteosarcoma
Primary bone lymphoma Adult > 40 years of age with bone pain or pathologic fracture Bone destruction; soft tissue mass 5 year survival is greater than 50% with radiation and chemotherapy

See Also

References

  1. Niederhuber, John E., et al. “Sarcomas.” Abeloff's Clinical Oncology E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences, 2019, pp. 1604 – 1654.e8.