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Osteosarcoma

Orpha number ORPHA668
Prevalence of rare diseases 1-9 / 100 000
Inheritance -
Age of onset Childhood
ICD 10 code
  • C40.9
MIM number
Synonym(s) Osteogenic sarcoma

Summary

Osteosarcoma is a primary malignant tumour of the skeleton characterised by the direct formation of immature bone or osteoid tissue by the tumour cells. Classic osteosarcoma is a rare (0.2% of all malignant tumours) highly malignant tumour, with an estimated incidence of 3 cases/million population/year. Osteosarcoma arises predominantly in the long bones and rarely in the soft tissues. The age at presentation ranges from 10 to 25 years of age. Plain radiographs, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, angiography and dynamic bone scintigraphy are used for diagnosis, evaluation the extent of tumour involvement and for making decisions about the type of operation and, if necessary, the type of reconstruction required. In the past, all patients with osteosarcoma were treated by amputation but the cure rate was under 10% and almost all patients died within a year from diagnosis. At present, the percentage of patients cured varies between 60% and 70% for localised osteosarcoma at onset (80% of cases) treated in specialised bone tumour centres with pre- and postoperative chemotherapy associated with surgery. Surgery is conservative (limb salvage) in more than 90% of patients. Prognosis is more severe (cure rate about 30%) for tumours located in the axial skeleton and in patients with metastasis at onset. *Author: Prof. P. Picci (January 2007)*. Reproduced from Osteosarcoma (Osteogenic sarcoma). Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2007;2:6.

Detailed information

Review article
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