Abstract

Bone metastases are common in many advanced solid tumours, being breast, prostate, thyroid, lung, and renal cancer the most prevalent. Bone metastases can produce skeletal-related events (SREs), defined as pathological fracture, spinal cord compression, need of bone irradiation or need of bone surgery, and hypercalcaemia. Patients with bone metastases experience pain, functional impairment and have a negative impact on their quality of life. Several imaging techniques are available for diagnosis of this disease. Bone-targeted therapies include zoledronic acid, a potent biphosfonate, and denosumab, an anti-RANKL monoclonal antibody. Both reduce the risk and/or delay the development of SREs in several types of tumours. Radium 233, an alpha-particle emitter, increases overall survival in patients with bone metastases from resistant castration prostate cancer. Multidisciplinary approach is essential and bone surgery and radiotherapy should be integrated in the treatment of bone metastases when necessary. This SEOM Guideline reviews bone metastases pathogenesis, clinical presentations, lab tests, imaging techniques for diagnosis and response assessment, bone-targeted agents, and local therapies, as radiation and surgery, and establishes recommendations for the management of patients with metastases to bone.

Highlights

  • Patients with solid tumours are highly susceptible to develop bone metastases

  • If a patient has a history of cancer without prior documentation of bone metastases, TC-guided fine needle aspiration and core biopsy are excellent method to document the presence of metastatic disease

  • The phase III Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) 90202 trial (Zoledronate in Preventing Skeletal [Bone]-Related Events in Men Who Are Receiving Androgen Deprivation Therapy For Prostate Cancer and Bone Metastases) [38] was early interrupted since no statistically significant differences between zoledronic acid (ZA) and placebo were observed in the time to first skeletal-related events (SREs), primary endpoint, after 645 men recruited and 299 SREs observed (31.9 months in ZA vs 29.8 months in placebo; HR 0.97)

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Summary

CLINICAL GUIDES IN ONCOLOGY

This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com

Introduction
Laboratory tests
Clinical and laboratory manifestations of bone metastases
Response assessment
Medical treatment options for bone metastases
Breast cancer
Prostate cancer
Other solid tumours
Lung cancer
Other treatment options for bone metastases
External beam radiotherapy
Stereotactic body radiation therapy
Orthopaedic surgery
Surgery for spinal metastases
Long bones
Pelvic and periacetabular defects
Other adjuvant studies
Findings
Compliance with ethical standards
Full Text
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