Annals of Medicine and Surgery | 2021

Limitations and usefulness of biopsy techniques for the diagnosis of metastatic bone and soft tissue tumors

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background Biopsies are widely used for diagnosing metastatic tumors in the bone and soft tissues; however, their usefulness and limitations remain unclear. Patients and methods Biopsies of patients (13 men, 8 women, mean age 76 years) with metastatic tumors in the bone (19 patients) and soft tissues (2 patients) were reviewed retrospectively. Investigators surveyed the lesion sites, medical histories, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status (PS), biopsy sites, methods, comorbidities, diagnoses, treatments, and outcomes. Results Five patients had multiple lesions, and 16 patients had one lesion. The ECOG PS scores were PS0 (11 patients), PS1 (7 patients), PS2 (2 patients), and PS3 (1 patient). Biopsy sites included pelvic bone (6 cases), rib bone (5 cases), spinal vertebra (7 cases), soft tissue of the shoulder (2 cases), and inner retroperitoneum (1 case). Diagnostic methods included open biopsy (8 patients), core needle biopsy under general (7 patients) or local (3 patients) anesthesia, and computed tomography–guided core needle biopsy under local anesthesia (3 patients). Histology indicated hematological malignancies (9 cases); breast cancer (3 patients); lung cancer, renal cell cancer, cancer of unknown primary (2 cases each); prostate cancer, endometrial (uterine) cancer, and myxoid liposarcoma (1 case each). The primary site identification rate was 90.5%. Outcomes included three patients “dead of disease.“ Conclusion Biopsies are useful for early diagnosis and for the scrutiny of primary lesions of metastatic bone and soft tissue tumors. If the primary tumor is still unknown after biopsy, evidence-based treatment should be initiated promptly.

Volume 68
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102581
Language English
Journal Annals of Medicine and Surgery

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