Bone & Soft Tissue Tumours Flashcards

1
Q

Name a benign and a malignant bone forming tumours?

A

Benign - Osteoid Osteoma or Osteoblastoma

Malignant - Osteosarcoma

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2
Q

Whats the commonest primary malignant bone tumour in young people?

A

Osteosarcoma

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3
Q

Name a benign and a malignant Cartilage formine tumour?

A

Benign - Enchondroma or osteochondroma

Malignant - Chondrosarcoma

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4
Q

Name a benign and a malignant fibrous tissue tumour?

A

Benign - Fibroma

Malignant - Fibrosarcoma and Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma (MFH)

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5
Q

Name a benign and a malignant Vascular tumour?

A

BEnign - Haemangioma And Aneurysmal bone cyst

Malignant - Angiosarcoma

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6
Q

Name a benign adipose tissue tumour?

A

Benign - Lipoma

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7
Q

Name some malignant marrow tumours?

A

Myeloma
Lymphoma
Ewing’s Sarcoma

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8
Q

Whats the commonest Primary Malignant Bone Tumour in Older patients?

A

Myeloma

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9
Q

How could a malignant bone tumour present?

A

Deep Boring Bone pain
- Progressive at rest & at night

A mass

Often just as an incidental X-ray finding

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10
Q

List various types of scans for bone tumours?

A
X-ray
CT
MRI
Angiography
Isotope Bone Scan
PET
Biopsy
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11
Q

What tests would you run before a biopsy?

A
Bloods
X-ray
MRI
Bone Scan
CT Chest/abdo/pelvis
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12
Q

Describe the clinical findings for a bone tumour:

A

Deep boring achy pain worse at night, often at rest & not activity related.
Progressive pain.

Loss of function –> Limp, reduced joint movement & stiff back

Swelling +/- warmth & venous congestion

Fracture

~Joint effusion, deformity, neurovascular effects & systemic effects

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13
Q

What about a fracture would suggest a malignancy?

A

Minimal trauma + pain prior to the trauma

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14
Q

Patient presents with a rapid growing, hard, craggy & non-tender swelling in the leg. Its painless. Whats likely?

A

A soft tissue tumour

The most common is a lipoma

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15
Q

How do you test for a soft tissue tumour?

A

An MRI

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16
Q

Whats more likely a metastatic tumour or a primary bone tumour?

A

Metastatic tumours are 25x more likely

17
Q

What are the common sites for a metastatic bone tumour to originate?

A
Lungs - smokers
Breasts
Prostate
KIdney
Thyroid
GI tract
Melanoma
18
Q

Whats the most likely metastatic thyroid cancer to hit bone?

A

Medullary thyroid cancer

19
Q

How would you test for the various source metastases?

A
CXR & Sputum cytology - for lung cancer
Examine breasts, thyroid and skin.
DRE & PSA for prostate
IVP + US for kidney
FOBT + Endoscopy + Tumour markers for GI tract cancers
20
Q

What are the commonest sites for metastatic bone cancer to arise?

A
Commonest first:
Vertebrae
Proximal Femur
Pelvis
Ribs
Sternum
Skull
21
Q

How do we prevent pathological fractures?

A

Early Chemo
Prophylactic Internal Fixation +/- bone cement
Embolisation

22
Q

When would we do prophylactic internal fixation or embolisation to prevent a pathological fracture?

A

PIF if:

  • LYtic lesion causing pain
  • > 2.5cm
  • > 50% cortical destruction

Embolisation esp for renal/thyroid mets

23
Q

How do we risk assess for pathological fracture in patients at risk of metastatic bone cancer?

A

With Mirel’s Scoring System