Osteosarcoma risk factors

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mohammadmain Rezazadehsaatlou[2].

Overview

Common risk factors in the development of osteosarcoma are radiation to bones, alkylating antineoplastic agents, Paget disease, multiple hereditary osteochondromas, fibrous dysplasia, Bloom syndrome,Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, and Li-Fraumeni syndrome.

Risk Factors

The most common risk factors for osteosarcoma include:

  • Teenage growth spurts
  • Being tall
  • Previous treatment with radiation for another cancer, especially at a young age or with high doses of radiation
  • Drugs: past treatment with anticancer drugs called alkylating antineoplastic agents
  • Presence of certain benign (noncancerous) bone diseases, such as:
  1. Paget disease of bone
  2. Multiple hereditary osteochondromas
  3. Fibrous dysplasia
  4. Enchondromtosis
  • Presence of certain rare, inherited disorders, such as:
  1. Bloom syndrome
  2. Diamond-Blackfan anemia
  3. Familial adenomatous polyposis
  4. Li-Fraumeni syndrome
  5. Hereditary retinoblastoma
  6. Rothmund-Thomson syndrome
  7. Werner syndrome

References

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