CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
REVIEW
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Anterior chest wall malignancies. A review of ten cases.

OBJECTIVES: To report the features of malignancies responsible for a chest wall mass and involving the sternum, the sternocostal and/or sternoclavicular joints, the chondrocostal junction and/or the adjacent soft tissues.

METHODS: The medical records of patients with a chest wall mass due to malignant disease were reviewed retrospectively. The following data were abstracted from each record: characteristics of the pain and mass, constitutional symptoms, physical findings, laboratory test results, findings from imaging studies (plain radiographs, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the chest, radionuclide bone scan), histologic features of the biopsy specimen from the chest wall mass and origin of the mass.

RESULTS: Seven men and three women with a mean age of 53.1 years were included in the study. A single patient had a history of malignant disease (lymphoma); in the remaining nine patients the chest wall mass was the first manifestation of the malignancy. All ten patients had pain with a mixed time pattern. The mass was located on the sternum in half the patients and in a parasternal location in the other half. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate elevation was found in seven patients, an increased serum level of lactate dehydrogenase in one and a monoclonal immunoglobulin in three. Sternal lesions were visible on plain radiographs in four patients. Computed tomography of the chest consistently disclosed sternal or sternocostal lytic lesions with spread to the adjacent soft tissues; in five cases, enlarged lymph nodes were visible in the anterior part of the mediastinum. Magnetic resonance imaging of the chest did not add to the information provided by computed tomography. Radionuclide uptake on the bone scan was increased, decreased, or normal at the site of the lesion. The cause was Hodgkin's disease in two cases, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in three, metastatic bone disease in two (from an adenocarcinoma of the lung and a hepatocarcinoma, respectively), multiple myeloma in one, and solitary plasmacytoma in two.

CONCLUSION: A chest wall mass can be caused by a known or as yet undiagnosed malignancy. Chest wall involvement due to malignant disease in rare, however. The specific features of sternal metastases, lymphomas involving the sternum, and sternal plasmacytomas are discussed. Nonmalignant chest wall lesions that can manifest as a bulging or swelling of the chest wall are reviewed.

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