Tumor-induced Osteomalacia: A Systematic Review and Individual Patient's Data Analysis

被引:27
|
作者
Rendina, Domenico [1 ]
Abate, Veronica [1 ]
Cacace, Giuseppe [1 ]
D' Elia, Lanfranco [1 ]
De Filippo, Gianpaolo [2 ]
Del Vecchio, Silvana [3 ]
Galletti, Ferruccio [1 ]
Cuocolo, Alberto [3 ]
Strazzullo, Pasquale [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Clin Med & Surg, I-80131 Naples, Italy
[2] Hop Robert Debre, Assistance Publ Hop Paris, Serv Endocrinol & Diabetol Pediat, F-75015 Paris, France
[3] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Adv Biomed Sci, I-80131 Naples, Italy
关键词
tumor induced osteomalacia; oncogenic osteomalacia; phosphaturic mesenchymal tumors; renal phosphate leak; hypophosphatemia; PEPTIDE RECEPTOR RADIONUCLIDE; METABOLISM; EXPRESSION; MANAGEMENT; FGF23;
D O I
10.1210/clinem/dgac253
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Context Tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO) is a rare paraneoplastic syndrome, usually caused by small, benign, and slow-growing phosphaturic mesenchymal tumors. Clinically, TIO is characterized by renal phosphate leak, causing hypophosphatemia and osteomalacia. This review was performed to assess the clinical characteristics of TIO patients described worldwide so far. Evidence Acquisition On June 26, 2021, a systematic search was performed in Medline, Google Scholar, Google book, and Cochrane Library using the terms: "tumor induced osteomalacia," "oncogenic osteomalacia," "hypophosphatemia." There were no language restrictions. This review was performed according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses criteria. Evidence Results Overall, 1725 TIO cases were collected. TIO was more frequent in adult men, who showed a higher incidence of fractures compared with TIO women. The TIO-causing neoplasms were identified in 1493 patients. The somatostatin receptor-based imaging modalities have the highest sensitivity for the identification of TIO-causing neoplasms. TIO-causing neoplasms were equally located in bone and soft tissues; the latter showed a higher prevalence of fractures and deformities. The surgery is the preferred TIO definitive treatment (successful in > 90% of patients). Promising nonsurgical therapies are treatments with burosumab in TIO patients with elevated fibroblast growth factor-23 levels, and with radiolabeled somatostatin analogs in patients with TIO-causing neoplasm identified by somatostatin receptor-based imaging techniques. Conclusion TIO occurs preferentially in adult men. The TIO clinical expressiveness is more severe in men as well as in patients with TIO-causing neoplasms located in soft tissues. Treatments with burosumab and with radiolabeled somatostatin analogs are the most promising nonsurgical therapies.
引用
收藏
页码:E3428 / E3436
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Tumor-induced osteomalacia - Current imaging modalities and a systematic approach for tumor localization
    Rayamajhi, Sampanna Jung
    Yeh, Randy
    Wong, Tony
    Dumeer, Shifali
    Mittal, Bhagwant Rai
    Remotti, Fabrizio
    Chikeka, Ijeuru
    Reddy, Arun K.
    CLINICAL IMAGING, 2019, 56 : 114 - 123
  • [42] Persistence and recurrence in tumor-induced osteomalacia: A systematic review of the literature and results from a national survey/case series
    Cianferotti, Luisella
    Poggi, Chiara Delli
    Bertoldo, Francesco
    Caffarelli, Carla
    Crotti, Chiara
    Gatti, Davide
    Giannini, Sandro
    Gonnelli, Stefano
    Mazzantini, Maurizio
    Ombretta, Viapiana
    Sella, Stefania
    Setti, Angela
    Varenna, Massimo
    Zucchi, Francesca
    Brandi, Maria Luisa
    ENDOCRINE, 2022, 76 (03) : 709 - 721
  • [43] Tumor-Induced Osteomalacia Resulting from Primary Cutaneous Phosphaturic Mesenchymal Tumor: A Case and Review of the Medical Literature
    Gardner, Kevin H.
    Shon, Wonwoo
    Folpe, Andrew L.
    Wieland, Carilyn N.
    Tebben, Peter J.
    Baum, Christian L.
    JOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, 2013, 40 (09) : 780 - 784
  • [44] Diagnosis and surgical treatment of tumor-induced osteomalacia—a literature review and a case report
    Peikai Huang
    Mengqiang Xiao
    Meng Zhang
    Jun Chen
    Jingzhi Ye
    Meiyi Zhao
    Jiahui Tang
    The Egyptian Journal of Internal Medicine, 2022, 34 (1)
  • [45] Tumor-induced osteomalacia: An important cause of adult-onset hypophosphatemic osteomalacia in China: Report of 39 cases and review of the literature
    Jiang, Yan
    Xia, Wei-bo
    Xing, Xiao-ping
    Silva, Barbara C.
    Li, Mei
    Wang, Ou
    Zhang, Hua-bing
    Li, Fang
    Jing, Hong-li
    Zhong, Ding-rong
    Jin, Jin
    Gao, Peng
    Zhou, Lian
    Qi, Fang
    Yu, Wei
    Bilezikian, John P.
    Meng, Xun-wu
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2012, 27 (09) : 1967 - 1975
  • [46] A Paranasal tumor associated with tumor-induced osteomalacia
    Inokuchi, Go
    Tanimoto, Hitoshi
    Ishida, Haruhiko
    Sugimoto, Toshitsugu
    Yamauchi, Mika
    Miyauchi, Akimitsu
    Nibu, Ken-ichi
    LARYNGOSCOPE, 2006, 116 (10) : 1930 - 1933
  • [47] Tumor-induced osteomalacia: experience from a South American academic center
    Gonzalez, G.
    Baudrand, R.
    Sepulveda, M. F.
    Vucetich, N.
    Guarda, F. J.
    Villanueva, P.
    Contreras, O.
    Villa, A.
    Salech, F.
    Toro, L.
    Michea, L.
    Florenzano, P.
    OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 28 (07) : 2187 - 2193
  • [48] Successful Management of Tumor-Induced Osteomalacia With Radiofrequency Ablation: A Case Series
    Mishra, Sunil Kumar
    Kuchay, Mohammad Shafi
    Sen, Ishita Barat
    Garg, Arpit
    Baijal, Sanjay Saran
    Mithal, Ambrish
    JBMR PLUS, 2019, 3 (07)
  • [49] En bloc spondylectomy for treatment of tumor-induced osteomalacia
    Sciubba, Daniel M.
    Petteys, Rory J.
    Shakur, Sophia F.
    Gokaslan, Ziya L.
    McCarthy, Edward F.
    Collins, Michael T.
    McGirt, Matthew J.
    Hsieh, Patrick C.
    Nelson, Clarke S.
    Wolinsky, Jean-Paul
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY-SPINE, 2009, 11 (05) : 600 - 604
  • [50] Reports of 17 Chinese patients with tumor-induced osteomalacia
    Yu, Wei-Jia
    He, Jin-Wei
    Fu, Wen-Zhen
    Wang, Chun
    Zhang, Zhen-Lin
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL METABOLISM, 2017, 35 (03) : 298 - 307