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Original Article

Pain as an indicator of bone metastasis

, , , &
Pages 445-450 | Accepted 25 Jan 1988, Published online: 07 Jan 2010
 

Abstract

Patients with breast or prostate cancer routinely referred for bone scintigraphy were evaluated for the presence of skeletal pain, as determined by a self administered questionnaire. Pain was a common finding, whether or not metastatic disease was present, and occurred in over half of patients. Although most patients with bone metastases did report bone pain, a significant fraction (21% of breast and 22% of prostate patients) were asymptomatic. A distinct minority of individual anatomic regions of metastasis were painful: pain was reported in 23% of sites of breast metastases and 15% of metastatic prostate cancer sites. of all sites at which pain was present, metastases were demonstrated in only about one half. These results indicate that pain is not a reliable indicator of the presence of location of metastatic bone disease

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