Cancer in Kids May Present as Musculoskeletal Symptoms, Complicating Diagnosis
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Childhood cancer may present with musculoskeletal symptoms that mimic the features of rheumatic diseases, especially juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), potentially leading to misdiagnosis, diagnostic delay and inappropriate use of glucocorticoids and immunosuppressive drugs, caution researchers in Italy.
“These findings confirm the high frequency of musculoskeletal presentation among patients with pediatric cancers and underscore the diagnostic difficulties that might be posed by the occurrence of musculoskeletal symptoms in isolation,” write Dr. Adele Civino of Fito Fazzi Hospital, in Lecce, and colleagues in a paper in The Lancet Rheumatology.
They studied 1,277 children newly diagnosed with a malignancy and 680 newly diagnosed with JIA.
A quarter of the children with cancer had musculoskeletal symptoms and these symptoms were most common in those diagnosed with bone tumors, Langerhans histiocytosis, leukemia, soft tissue sarcoma, and neuroblastoma. The most common musculoskeletal complaints were joint pain (61%) and limb bone pain (35%).
Musculoskeletal symptoms were the only presenting complaints in 5% of children with hematological malignancies and 12% with solid malignancies.
Most of the children with musculoskeletal symptoms had at least one systemic feature; 48% of children with cancer and arthropathy had only one joint involved, most often the hip or knee.
On multivariable analysis, limb bone pain was the independent variable most strongly associated with malignancy. Systemic symptoms independently associated with cancer included weight loss and thrombocytopenia, as well as hip involvement and male sex.
Factors independently associated with JIA were morning stiffness, joint swelling and involvement of the small hand joints.
“The results of this study highlight the clinical manifestations that are most valuable to suspect a malignancy in children who present with musculoskeletal complaints and provide the clues that might help clinicians to differentiate cancer with articular symptoms from juvenile idiopathic arthritis,” Dr. Civino and colleagues conclude in their paper.
The author of a linked comment says “knowledge of the broad variety of malignancies that present with musculoskeletal symptoms, as well as insight into the clinical differences between, and specific aspects of, juvenile idiopathic arthritis categories is of great importance.”
“Although hematological malignancies are particularly known for presenting with symptoms mimicking juvenile idiopathic arthritis, this study reveals that several other malignancies can do so as well,” writes Dr. Lisette W. A. van Suijlekom-Smit of Erasmus MC Sophia Children’s Hospital, in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
“The study by Civino and colleagues also emphasizes the importance of knowing the spectrum of signs and symptoms of specific joint diseases other than juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Diagnostic incompatibilities should arouse clinical suspicion and the consideration of a possible malignant disease,” Dr. van Suijlekom-Smit concludes.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/3bwhDDl and https://bit.ly/3eRool2 Lancet Rheumatology, online May 11, 2021.
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