Abstract
A breast cancer patient developed an atypical femoral fracture after 9years of bisphosphonate therapy for the treatment of multiple bone metastases. We histopathologically analyzed the femoral cortical bone at the fracture site and the iliac cancellous bone. Four months prior to the fracture, the patient had experienced pain in the right femur and underwent plain radiography and bone scintigraphy which revealed cortical thickening and radioisotope accumulation at each site, respectively. The patient had also experienced a non-traumatic fracture at the same site on the contralateral side 2years earlier. Based on these findings, atypical femoral fracture was diagnosed and intramedullary nailing performed. A cortical bone specimen taken from near the fracture site during surgery showed marked microdamages, and analysis of the iliac cancellous bone specimen revealed severely suppressed bone turnover. These findings suggest that microdamage and severely suppressed bone turnover are associated with atypical femoral fracture reported in this patient with long-term bisphosphonate therapy.
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