State-of-the-art of multidisciplinary approach of bone metastasis-directed therapy: review and challenging questions for preparation of a GEMO practice guidelines.
Emmanuel Mesny, Nicolas Martz, Nicolas Stacoffe, Frédéric Clarençon, Matthias Louis, Nacer Mansouri, François Sirveaux, Sébastien Thureau, Jean-Christophe Faivre
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bone is a common secondary site of dissemination during the course of cancer. Bone metastases (BM) can be associated with skeletal-related events (SRE) such as disabling pain, hypercalcemia, and bone instability that leads to pathological fractures or spinal cord compression. SRE contribute to high morbidity as well as, mortality, and have a negative economic impact. Modern management of BM integrates focal treatments (such as radiotherapy, surgery, and interventional radiology), orthoses, and antiresorptive and systemic oncological treatment. The choice of a metastasis-directed therapy depends on the objective of the treatment, the patient characteristics, and the complete assessment of the bone lesion (pain, neurological risk, and instability). In the narrative review present herein, we aim to provide an updated summary of the literature, with description of the advantages and disadvantages of current and emerging strategies in the multimodal treatment of BM and, based on these data, an updated algorithm for the management of BM.
期刊介绍:
Contemporary biomedical research is on the threshold of an era in which physiological and pathological processes can be analyzed in increasingly precise and mechanistic terms.The transformation of biology from a largely descriptive, phenomenological discipline to one in which the regulatory principles can be understood and manipulated with predictability brings a new dimension to the study of cancer and the search for effective therapeutic modalities for this disease. Cancer and Metastasis Reviews provides a forum for critical review and discussion of these challenging developments.
A major function of the journal is to review some of the more important and interesting recent developments in the biology and treatment of malignant disease, as well as to highlight new and promising directions, be they technological or conceptual. Contributors are encouraged to review their personal work and be speculative.