Osteosarcomas are primary malignant tumors that are characterized by the production of osteoid or immature bone. However they are the most common primary malignant tumor of bone in adolescents and young adults, the diagnosis of osteosarcoma is often delayed. It is because of the rarity of population, the variety of findings, nonspecific symptoms and so on. A 46-year-old male patient had left knee pain for 3 months without any symptoms in his right knee. At a nearby clinic, X-ray of his healthy side was taken by chance. The irregular bone formation was however seen in the metaphysis of the distal femur with spreading into the soft tissues. No abnormal findings were pointed out at his left side knee. A diagnosis of pleomorphic sarcoma was made by incisional biopsy. Pulmonary CT showed multiple nodules which were considered as multiple lung metastases. He was diagnosed as right femoral sarcoma, clinical stage IV (T1N0M1a) by TNM classification. He underwent preoperative chemotherapy, followed by limb-saving operation. No preoperative complaints were found in his left knee. Final diagnosis of surgically resected specimen was osteoblastic osteosarcoma which showed neoplastic osteoid formation within pleomorphic malignant cells. However, osteosarcomas occurred in adult populations are sometimes occurred as a secondary neoplasms, he had a history of diabetes but no other medical history, such as radiation therapy for a solid cancer, Paget’s disease, other benign bone lesions or inherited conditions. As far as our knowledge, we believe that this is a first case report of asymptomatic incidental osteosarcoma.
Osteosarcomas are uncommon malignant bone tumors, which are characterized by the production of osteoid or immature bone by the malignant cells. The incidence has a bimodal distribution with peaks in early adolescence and in elderly.
In children, osteosarcomas account for approximately 3 percent of childhood cancers overall. The peak incidence is during the adolescent growth spurt.
In adults, osteosarcomas are often considered as secondary neoplasms. About one-third of osteosarcomas in adults arise in a background of Paget’s diseases of bone or previous cancer. Several risk factors of osteosarcoma in adults are recognized, such as Paget’s disease, inherited conditions, benign bone tumor, and prior irradiation or chemotherapy.
Almost all osteosarcoma patients complain of symptoms related to their lesion at the first medical visit. Physical findings are regional pain, palpable mass, restricted movement of joint and others. A previous study about complaints of malignant bone tumors reported that 85% patients had pain related strain, 21% had pain at night, 47% had the onset of symptoms related to minor trauma and 39% had a palpable mass.
We experienced a rare case of asymptomatic osteosarcoma who was diagnosed accidentally. Here, we report a rare case of incidental osteosarcoma.
A 46-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of irregular bone formation in his right femur.
He did not suffer any pain until 7 months before hospital admission, due to his left knee pain. He had not visited a medical institution for 6 months because he had no difficulties in daily life. He saw his primary care provider half a year after the pain had begun. He reported left knee pain, but no symptoms in his right leg. A radiograph of his healthy side, the right knee, was taken by mistake. The result showed irregular bone formation in the right femur. However, no symptoms such as palpable mass, atrophy of muscle, fever and weight loss were found.
His medical history included only diabetes mellitus, without history of benign bone lesion, Paget’s disease, inherited conditions, and prior irradiation or chemotherapy. He had no family history of malignancy.
His vital signs were within normal limits with a blood pressure of 122/87 mmHg, a pulse of 82 beats per minute, a temperature 36.8˚C, and a room air oxygen saturation of 99%. The weight was 104.6 kg, height 165.2 cm, and body mass index 38.3. Physical examination showed normal conditions other than left knee pain. The serum alkaline phosphatase level was not high (294U/l), and the levels of total protein, albumin, lactate dehydrogenase, blood urea nitrogen, sodium, potassium, chloride and C-reactive protein were within normal limits. Liver and renal function were normal. According to the screening tests, the serum levels of tumor markers, including carcinoembryonic antigen, squamous cell carcinoma antigen, pro gastrin-releasing peptide and cytokeratin 19 fragment were not high. The complete blood count was normal. The activated partial-thromboplastin time, the prothrombin time and the international normalized ratio were within normal range.
His leg radiograph revealed irregular bone formation in the metaphysis of the distal femur, which spread to soft tissues (
He had received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, combination with cisplatin and adriamycin. After one course of the regimen, he could not continue it due to renal dysfunction. We performed extraarticular resection of the left femoral tumor and arthroplasty.
After the operation, CT showed that pulmonary metastases had increased. He received chemotherapy again. A regimen of Carboplatin caused renal dysfunction. He continued the chemotherapy, Doxorubicin and Cyclophosphamide by turns. After six courses, pulmonary CT revealed the spread of metastases. He complained of headache and diplopia, and MRI showed the multiple metastases of brain. He received radiation therapy for brain. Two years later after the operation, he died of respiratory failure caused by tumors.
Histological findings of biopsy specimen showed proliferation of pleomorphic atypical spindle cells with neoplastic osteoid formation. Immunohistochemical staining of the tumor cells showed positive for desmin, alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA), muscle-specific actin (HHF35), and focally for S100, but negative for cytokeratin(CK) AE1/3, myogenin and myogenic differentiation 1 (MyoD1). Ki67/MIB1 labeling index was over 30 percent, score 3 (
A surgically resected specimen showed 5.0 × 4.9 × 3.6 cm-sized tumor, located in the metaphysis of the right femur with extension around the soft tissue. The histological findings of this lesion were similar to the previous biopsy specimen, e.g. osteogenic sarcoma. The tumor composed of pleomorphic undifferentiated sarcomatous area, conventional osteoblastic osteosarcoma (grade 3 - 4) and low grade fibroblastic osteosarcoma (grade 1 - 2) (
Patients of osteosarcoma generally have some symptoms such as pain or palpable mass [
Widhe (2000) reported initial symptoms and clinical features in osteosarcomas [
As far as we know, there has been no report of asymptomatic osteosarcoma, but a case of Ewing’s sarcoma without pain has been reported. Edwin Choy (2009) reported a case of 23-year-old male with cough and, hoarseness that had developed a month beforehospital admission [
Mayordomo JI (1993) showed neoplasm of unknown primary site(NUPS) [
K. Godley (2008) showed the features of patients with a malignant primary bone tumor of the femur with a pathological fracture [
F. Gouin (2008) reported the diagnostic difficulties about osteosarcoma over 40 years of age [
Thus, the diagnosis of osteosarcoma in adults is difficult. In our case, if he had not diagnosed by chance, he might be misdiagnosed leading to non-optimal treatment or be diagnosed by a pathological fracture, respiratory or other symptoms after he got worse or when he suffered pathological fracture.
Mark D. Murphey (1997) pointed that conventional osteosarcoma were aggressive lesions with rapid doubling times and therefore were often large at the time of diagnosis [
We experienced a rare case of asymptomatic osteosarcoma. We found no report of osteosarcoma presenting as “incidentaloma”. In almost all cases, osteosarcoma was not diagnosed until symptoms appeared.
The diagnosis of osteosarcoma in adult populations is difficult, and some have been misdiagnosed or diagnosed after progress unlike this case.
ReikoYamaguchi,SeiichiMatsumoto,KeisukeAe,TaisukeTanizawa,TabuGokita,KeikoHayakawa,YukiFunauchi,MunehisaKito,HirotadaIshii,NorikoMotoi, (2015) Case Report: Asymptomatic Osteosarcoma. Case Reports in Clinical Medicine,04,369-375. doi: 10.4236/crcm.2015.412075