• Sao Paulo Med J · Jan 2005

    Diagnosis of malignancies in children with musculoskeletal complaints.

    • Marcela Gonçalves, Maria Teresa Ramos Ascensão Terreri, Cássia Maria Passarelli Lupolli Barbosa, Cláudio Arnaldo Len, Lucia Lee, and Maria Odete Esteves Hilário.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola Paulista de Medicina, São Paulo, Brazil.
    • Sao Paulo Med J. 2005 Jan 2; 123 (1): 212321-3.

    ContextMusculoskeletal complaints may be associated with neoplasias as an initial manifestation of the disease. When these symptoms predominate at the onset of the disease, the differential diagnosis includes several rheumatic diseases.ObjectiveTo assess the frequency, clinical features and types of cancer manifested in children presenting with musculoskeletal complaints over a seven-year period.Type Of StudyRetrospective.SettingDiscipline of Allergy, Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, Universidade Federal de São Paulo-Escola Paulista de Medicina.MethodsThe medical records of patients with musculoskeletal complaints and final diagnosis of malignant disease were reviewed. The data collected were: age when symptoms initially presented, age at diagnosis, clinical features presented, laboratory findings, and the initial and final diagnoses.ResultsA final diagnosis of cancer was found in nine out of 3,528 patients (0.25%) whose initial symptom was musculoskeletal pain. The mean time between disease onset and final diagnosis was five months. The most common features presented were pauciarticular arthritis or arthralgia involving the large joints. Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis was the most frequent initial diagnosis, in four out of nine patients. Anemia was the most frequent initial hematological change. Six out of eight patients had an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate. The lactate dehydrogenase level was raised in five out of eight patients. The malignancies found included acute lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, lymphoma, neuroblastoma and Ewing's sarcoma.DiscussionThe frequency of neoplasia in patients with musculoskeletal pain resembled reports in the literature. Consumptive symptoms were not the warning signal in most of our patients. In subsidiary tests, progressive anemia was the most common finding, although the peripheral blood cell count may continue to be normal for weeks or months after symptom onset.ConclusionMalignancy always needs to be ruled out in cases of children with musculoskeletal complaints. Uncharacteristic clinical manifestations and nonspecific laboratory tests may cause difficulty in the final diagnosis, and rigorous investigation should be performed.

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