Osteosarcoma
Background
- Most common primary pediatric bone tumor
- 3% of all childhood cancers
- Around two-thirds of those diagnosed with non-metastatic disease under the age of 40 will be long-term survivors or cured of the disease with appropriate treatment
- Survival is less than 20 percent with metastatic disease
- One-fifth will have metastases at presentation
- Most common metastatic site is lung followed by bone
- Bimodal as it peaks in early adolescence and over the age of 65
Pathophysiology
- Overproduction of osteoid and immature bone by malignant osteoblasts
Clinical Features
- Often an adolescent during a growth spurt
- Bone pain for several months that worsens with activity and is more painful at night
- Absence of constitutional symptoms (e.g., fevers, weight loss, night sweats, and decreased appetite are typically absent)
- Large soft tissue mass on exam that is tender to palpation
- Occurs at metaphysis of long bones
- Most commonly at the distal femur followed by the proximal tibia
- Less frequently presents as pathological fracture
- Risk factors include prior cancer treatment, Paget disease of bone, benign bone disease, Hereditary Retinoblastoma or Li-Fraumeni syndrome
Differential Diagnosis
Malignant
- Multiple myeloma
- Chondrosarcoma
- Paget disease
- Ewing sarcoma
- Giant cell tumor
- Adamantinoma
- Chordoma
- Primary bone lymphoma
- Fibrosarcoma
- Myosarcoma
- Abscess
Benign
- Chrondroblastoma
- Enchondroma
- Langerhans cell histiocytosis of bone
- Osteoblastoma
- Osteochondroma
- Osteoid Osteoma
