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Erschienen in: Clinical & Experimental Metastasis 6/2019

16.08.2019 | Research Paper

Metastatic dissemination patterns of different primary tumors to the spine and other bones

verfasst von: Julia S. Onken, Lucius S. Fekonja, Romy Wehowsky, Vanessa Hubertus, Peter Vajkoczy

Erschienen in: Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | Ausgabe 6/2019

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Abstract

Metastatic spine disease (MSD) is a severe event in cancer patients. Experimental data indicate that bone metastasis is mostly mediated by blood flow-dependent, passive arrest of circulating tumor cells to the bone metastatic niche (BMN). Here, we have set out to test these experimental observations in a clinical, human setting to improve our understanding of MSD. 507 patients, treated on spinal metastases in our institution from 2005 to  2015 were retrospectively evaluated. We identified 259 patients with accessible staging reports of the skeleton before and at initial diagnosis of MSD. Data analysis comprised localizations of bone metastases, underlying malignancy and time to development of MSD. Dissemination pattern of bone metastasis was correlated with red bone marrow (RBM) content of the respective bone as a measure of blood flow. Spinal metastases occurred most frequently in lung cancer (21%), prostate cancer (19%), and breast cancer (12%). At the diagnosis of MSD, majority of patients have multiple extra-spinal bone metastases (2/3). The distribution of metastases to extra-spinal bones and to the spine is mostly proportional to the RBM content of the involved bone. Corresponding to the high RBM content, thoracic spine, pelvic bones and ribs represent a predilection site for bone metastasis. We confirm a distinct preference of cancer types to metastasize to bones. When it comes to bone metastases all primaries show uniform distribution pattern, which supports the hypothesis of a predominantly blood flow-dependent distribution of tumor cells and passive arrest to the BMN rather than a spine-specific homing mechanism.
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Metadaten
Titel
Metastatic dissemination patterns of different primary tumors to the spine and other bones
verfasst von
Julia S. Onken
Lucius S. Fekonja
Romy Wehowsky
Vanessa Hubertus
Peter Vajkoczy
Publikationsdatum
16.08.2019
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis / Ausgabe 6/2019
Print ISSN: 0262-0898
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7276
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10585-019-09987-w

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