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Bone metastasis pattern of cancer patients with bone metastasis but no visceral metastasis.

Background: Bone metastasis of cancer can be a result from systemic blood spreading or vertebral venous plexus spreading. Systemic blood pathway induced bone metastasis can happen in any bone in the body since the spreading is considered to be random. However, it remains unknown whether there is any pattern of vertebral venous plexus related bone metastasis. In this study, we explored bone metastasis patterns in patients whose primary tumors had been well identified.

Methods: We included 290 consecutive cancer patients with bone metastases but no visceral metastases, out of 2559 patients whose bone metastases were diagnosed by positron emission tomography/computed tomography, between Jan 2015 and Oct 2017 at the Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center. We excluded those with visceral metastasis to ensure that our study focused on metastasis through the vertebral venous plexus. And we analyzed the distribution and pattern of skeletal metastases.

Results: Of the 290 patients, 28 had head and neck tumors, 178 had thorax tumors, 49 had abdominal tumors and 35 had pelvic tumors; 102 (35%) had only one bone containing a metastasis and 188 (65%) had multiple bones containing metastases. Overall, metastases to the thoracic skeleton were more common in patients with thorax tumors than in other patients (81% vs. 67%, P  = 0.007); metastases to the cervical spine or thoracic bones were more common in patients with primary tumors above the diaphragm than those below the diaphragm (82% vs. 66%, P  = 0.002). Among those with only one bone containing a metastasis ( n  = 102), patients with head and neck tumors had a higher incidence of cervical spine metastasis than other patients (25% vs. 2%, P  = 0.03), those with thorax tumors had a higher incidence of thoracic bone metastasis than other patients (56% vs. 35%, P  = 0.035), and those with pelvic tumors had a higher incidence of pelvis bone metastasis than other patients (78% vs. 27%, P  = 0.000054).

Conclusions: In patients with only one bone containing a metastasis but no visceral metastasis, bones near the primary were more likely to be first metastasized. This may be a valuable clue to primary tumor sites in patients with cancers of unknown primaries.

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