Verified By Apollo Hospitals October 1, 2024
What is Osteosarcoma? Cells are the basic units of life. We are complex beings composed of nearly 30 trillion cells. When these cells begin to multiply abnormally fast, cancer develops.
But, what is a sarcoma? There are many types of cancer arising in different parts of the body. Sarcoma is the one originating in bones, muscles or soft tissues. So, osteosarcoma is a type of cancer that affects bones.
Osteosarcoma is a type of cancer that starts from the bone cells. It is also called osteogenic sarcoma. The cells that help in the formation of healthy bones start multiplying in an uncontrolled way, resulting in a tumor formation. Unlike the healthy cells, the affected cells are weak and cause fractures.
Osteosarcoma most commonly affects the teenagers, followed by young adults and then children. Long bones found in your arms, forearms, thighs and legs are at higher risk than other parts.
Osteosarcoma can also affect other bones like the pelvis (hip bone), shoulder bones, jawbone, etc.
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Frequently observed signs and symptoms of osteosarcoma are:
If you are experiencing the symptoms mentioned above, we recommend you consult your doctor.
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Complications of osteosarcoma are:
The cancer can spread all over the body and cause difficulty in treatment and recovery. Lungs and other bones are the common sites of metastasis (spread of cancer) of osteosarcoma.
Your surgeon will never want to amputate or adopt all extreme measures of treatment to save your limb.
Osteosarcoma, a type of bone cancer, needs immediate surgical and radiation therapy. Doctors select the treatment options based on where the osteosarcoma has started, the size of cancer, the type and grade of the osteosarcoma, including whether the cancer has spread beyond the bone.
Treatment options include:
Surgical intervention depends upon the size of a tumor, its location and its stage of spread . There are three types of surgeries:
Chemotherapy involves the use of cancer-killing drugs. Your doctor will recommend undergoing chemotherapy before surgery for osteosarcoma, that is, neoadjuvant therapy.
Chemotherapy before surgery will allow the doctors to examine the nature of the cancer cells. If the tumor shrinks, it will indicate limb-sparing surgery. Otherwise, it will suggest an aggressive treatment plan.
As the name suggests, radiation therapy uses X-rays and protons to kill and eradicate cancer cells.
Awareness of the cancer will make you confident about making decisions about the treatment and having a fruitful discussion with your doctor.
As of now, there are no known environmental causes and no known way to prevent osteosarcoma other than avoiding unnecessary radiation. Other bone diseases, like fibrous dysplasia and Paget’s disease of bone, and some inherited conditions, such as hereditary Bloom syndrome, retinoblastoma, Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, Li-Fraumeni syndrome and Werner syndrome may pose risks for osteosarcoma.
Thanks to advances in chemotherapy and various surgical methods, chances of full recovery from osteosarcoma have significantly improved. Although, it does depend on the severity, location and size of a tumor.
In men, Busulfan is a chemo drug currently linked with the risk of infertility. Alkylating drugs in chemotherapy can also have a damaging effect on sperm count.
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