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Metastatic Cancer
Metastatic
cancer is cancer that has spread from the part of the body
where it started (called its primary
site) to other parts of the body. When cells break away
from a cancerous tumor, they can travel to other areas of the body
through either the bloodstream or lymphatic channels.
When the cells travel through lymphatic channels they can
become trapped in lymph
nodes, often those closest to the cancer’s primary site.
When the cells travel through the bloodstream they can go to any part
of the body. Most of these cells die, but occasionally they don't. They
settle in a new location, begin to grow, and form new tumors. The
spread of a cancer to a new part of the body is called metastasis.
Even when cancer has spread to a new location, it is still
named after the part of the body where it started. For example, if
prostate cancer spreads to the bones, it is still called prostate
cancer, and if breast cancer spreads to the lungs it is still breast
cancer. A person with breast cancer that has spread to the bones is
said to have breast cancer with bone metastases. (If you
are talking about more than one metastasis, they are called
metastases.)
When cancer comes back in a patient who appeared to be free of
cancer (in remission)
after treatment, it is called a recurrence.
Cancer may recur in several ways:
- local
recurrence (in or near the same organ where it developed),
for example, a recurrence of breast cancer in the skin of the chest
near where the original cancer was removed;
- regional
recurrence (in nearby lymph nodes or in the area from
which lymph nodes had been removed); or
- distant
recurrence (involving any other part of the body not
included in local or regional recurrence). Distant recurrence is also
called metastatic
recurrence. For example, the cancer might recur in distant
parts of body such as in bones, the liver, or the lungs. This happens
because some cancer cells have broken off from the original tumor,
traveled elsewhere, and begun growing in these new places.
Sometimes metastatic tumors have already developed when the
cancer is first diagnosed. In some cases, the metastasis is discovered
before the primary (original) tumor is found. Sometimes a cancer can
spread widely throughout the body before it is discovered without
developing as a large tumor in the site where it started. When the
original site cannot be determined, this condition is called cancer of unknown primary.
Bone Metastasis: What It Means
Cancer cells that break off from a primary tumor and enter the
bloodstream can reach nearly all tissues of the body. Bones are one of
the most common sites for these circulating cells to settle and start
growing. Metastases can occur in bones anywhere in the body, but they
are mostly found in bones near the center of the body.
Bone metastasis is not the same as cancer that starts in the
bone, which is called primary
bone cancer. Bone metastasis and primary bone cancers are
very different. Primary bone cancer is much less common than bone
metastasis.
Bone metastasis is one of the most frequent causes of pain in
people with cancer. It can also cause bones to break and high calcium
levels in the blood (calcium is released from damaged bones). Bone
metastasis also causes other symptoms and complications that can lower
your ability to maintain your usual activities and lifestyle.
Bone metastases develop in many people with cancer (except for
those with skin cancers such as basal cell and squamous cell cancer) at
some point in the course of the disease. The bone is the third most
common site for metastases after lung and liver.
The spine is the part of the skeleton most commonly affected
by bone metastasis. The next most common parts are the pelvis, hip,
upper leg bones (femurs), and the skull. Last Revised: 03/09/2007
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