Osteolysis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment
Osteolysis refers to the pathological breakdown of bone tissue. It can be caused by tumors, infections, or metabolic disorders, leading to weakened bones and increased fracture risk.
Things worth knowing about "Osteolysis"
Osteolysis refers to the pathological breakdown of bone tissue. It can be caused by tumors, infections, or metabolic disorders, leading to weakened bones and increased fracture risk.
What is Osteolysis?
Osteolysis (from the Greek osteon = bone and lysis = dissolution) refers to the pathological destruction or resorption of bone tissue. The bone structure is broken down locally or over a wider area, which can result in loss of structural integrity, pain, and an elevated risk of fracture. Osteolytic lesions can occur in any bone in the body and are an important diagnostic finding in radiology and oncology.
Causes
A variety of diseases and conditions can lead to osteolysis:
- Bone metastases: The most common cause in adults. Cancer cells from primary tumors (e.g., breast, prostate, or lung cancer) spread to bone and activate bone-resorbing cells called osteoclasts.
- Multiple myeloma: A malignant tumor of plasma cells in the bone marrow that characteristically causes multiple osteolytic lesions.
- Primary bone tumors: Less common, but possible in osteosarcoma, giant cell tumor, or Ewing sarcoma.
- Infections: Bacterial bone infections (osteomyelitis) can lead to localized bone destruction.
- Metabolic disorders: For example, primary hyperparathyroidism, in which elevated levels of parathyroid hormone promote bone resorption.
- Langerhans cell histiocytosis: A rare condition in which specialized immune cells accumulate in bone and cause osteolytic lesions.
- Periprosthetic osteolysis: Bone loss around joint implants, triggered by wear particles from the prosthesis.
Symptoms
The symptoms of osteolysis depend on the underlying cause, the affected bone, and the extent of bone destruction:
- Bone pain: Often the first and leading symptom -- typically dull, persistent, and not necessarily related to physical activity.
- Pathological fractures: Bone destruction can cause fractures with minimal trauma or even spontaneously.
- Swelling and tenderness: Particularly noticeable in superficially located bones.
- Neurological deficits: When the spine is affected, spinal cord compression may lead to paralysis, numbness, or other neurological symptoms.
- Hypercalcemia: Extensive bone breakdown releases calcium into the bloodstream, potentially causing nausea, confusion, and cardiac arrhythmias.
Diagnosis
Osteolysis is diagnosed using a combination of imaging and laboratory investigations:
- X-ray: Osteolytic lesions appear as dark, radiolucent areas within the bone. They typically become visible after approximately 30 % of bone mass has been lost.
- Computed tomography (CT): Provides more detailed information about the size and exact location of the lesion.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): Particularly sensitive for bone marrow involvement and soft tissue extension.
- Bone scintigraphy and PET-CT: Used to detect metastatic disease throughout the entire skeleton.
- Laboratory tests: Serum calcium, alkaline phosphatase, tumor markers, and complete blood count can provide important diagnostic clues.
- Bone biopsy: Performed to confirm the diagnosis histologically when the cause remains unclear.
Treatment
Treatment is directed at the underlying cause of osteolysis:
Medical Treatment
- Bisphosphonates (e.g., zoledronic acid) and denosumab inhibit osteoclast activity and slow bone resorption. They are commonly used in the setting of bone metastases and multiple myeloma.
- Antitumor therapy: Chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormone therapy, or targeted therapies directed against the primary tumor.
- Antibiotics for osteomyelitis to treat the underlying bacterial infection.
- Analgesics to relieve bone pain and improve quality of life.
Surgical Treatment
- Stabilization of existing or impending fractures using implants or prostheses.
- Vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty for vertebral compression fractures.
- Revision surgery and implant exchange in cases of periprosthetic osteolysis.
Radiation Therapy
Local irradiation of osteolytic bone metastases can effectively reduce pain and help slow further bone destruction.
References
- Coleman, R. E. (2006). Clinical features of metastatic bone disease and risk of skeletal morbidity. Clinical Cancer Research, 12(20 Suppl), 6243s–6249s. PubMed PMID: 17062708.
- Roodman, G. D. (2004). Mechanisms of bone metastasis. New England Journal of Medicine, 350(16), 1655–1664.
- Lipton, A. (2010). Pathophysiology of bone metastases: how this knowledge may lead to therapeutic intervention. Journal of Supportive Oncology, 8(4 Suppl 1), 4–9.
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