Proximal Tibial Bone Metastases in Patient with Breast Carcinoma: A Rare Case Report

Authors

  • Amardeep Chaudhary Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Centre, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal
  • Asmita Raymajhi Department of Radiation Oncology, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal
  • Sulav Sapkota Department of Medical Oncology, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal
  • Akhter Afroza Institute of Nuclear Medicine & Allied Sciences (INMAS), Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • Ganga D Adhikari Department of Radio-diagnosis, Imaging & Nuclear Medicine, BP Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital, Bharatpur, Chitwan, Nepal
  • Birendra Yadav Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Centre, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal
  • Om Prakash Yadav Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Centre, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal
  • Ajay Kumar Yadav Department of Radiation Oncology, Birat Medical College Teaching Hospital, Birat Cancer Institute, Tankisinuwari, Budhiganga-2, Morang, Nepal,

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/njc.v10i1.93725

Keywords:

Acrometastases, Bone Scintigraphy, Breast Carcinoma, Bone metastases

Abstract

Background: Bone metastases from any carcinoma below elbow and knee are rare, those to tibia are even rarer. Diagnosis sometimes may defer and often confused with primary bone carcinoma, osteomyelitis or arthritis. Management depends on extent of disease and severity of symptoms. Both radical and palliative treatment are possible, depending on the overall clinical severity.

Case Presentation: We present a case of a 41-year female patient with a history of right breast carcinoma. Previously, the patient was misdiagnosed as right breast fibroadenoma with sebaceous cyst, a mass measuring 13.1x9.5x6.7 mm3. The patient was then advised to have an excisional biopsy of whole solid mass and mass was sent for histopathology examination to get clear opinion. The histopathology report revealed that there was cribriform ductal carcinoma in situ intermediate nuclear grade. Before starting any treatment, the patient is advised to have all the required laboratory examinations, CECT chest abdomen and 99mTc-MDP whole body bone scan. Whole body bone scan revealed that there is osteoblastic lesion in shaft of right proximal tibia suggestive of bone metastases. Later it was confirmed with histopathology report.

Conclusion: Proximal tibial bone metastasis in a patient with breast carcinoma is a relatively very uncommon, but challenging, site for bone metastasis.

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Published

2026-05-01

How to Cite

Chaudhary, A., Raymajhi, A., Sapkota, S., Afroza, A., Adhikari, G. D., Yadav, B., … Yadav , A. K. (2026). Proximal Tibial Bone Metastases in Patient with Breast Carcinoma: A Rare Case Report. Nepalese Journal of Cancer, 10(1), 50–52. https://doi.org/10.3126/njc.v10i1.93725

Issue

Section

Case Reports