Bone metastasis after a resection of stage I and II primary lung cancer
- PMID: 10699693
- DOI: 10.1016/s0169-5002(99)00108-7
Bone metastasis after a resection of stage I and II primary lung cancer
Abstract
In the present study, we reviewed the patients who developed bone metastases after a surgical resection of primary lung cancer and evaluated their clinicopathological features. From 1992 to 1995, 177 patients with stage I and II primary lung cancer underwent a surgical resection at the Kitakyushu Municipal Medical Center. Bone metastases were detected in 14 patients (7.9%) by follow-up examinations including bone scintigraphy (scan). Bone metastasis was one of the most frequent extra-thoracic recurrent forms. Patients with adenocarcinoma tended to develop bone metastases more frequently than those with squamous cell carcinoma. In the preoperative bone scans, an abnormal uptake was observed in 76 patients (42.9%), and 10 (13.1%) of them were found to develop bone metastases in the follow-up studies. A microscopic examination of the primary tumor demonstrated close correlation between intratumoral and peritumoral lymphatic vessel invasion and postoperative development of bone metastases. A bone scan is a very useful and indispensable procedure for diagnosing bone metastases. However, this scan may also show false positive finding in a number of benign conditions. Therefore, a surgical resection should be considered as the first-line treatment for patients with positive findings in the bone scan when the diagnosis of bone metastasis can not be confirmed based on both their symptoms and other clinical examinations.
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