• OBJECTIVE
    • To evaluate the initial presenting symptoms and management of osteosarcoma in Hong Kong Chinese children, in relation to any possible impact on disease outcomes.
  • DESIGN
    • Retrospective study.
  • SETTING
    • A tertiary referral centre of bone cancer in a university teaching hospital in Hong Kong.
  • PATIENTS
    • All children aged younger than 18 years with a diagnosis of osteosarcoma who received treatment from March 1994 to October 2005.
  • RESULTS
    • A total of 51 children were studied. The median age of onset was 13 (range, 3-20) years; 61% were males. The tumours were located in the distal femur and proximal tibia, which accounted for 45% and 22% of the cases, respectively; 24% of patients had metastatic disease at presentation. Swelling (76%) and pain (90%) were the most common presenting complaints. Approximately one third of the patients had a preceding history of trauma. The median duration of initial symptoms to first medical consultation of any sort was 30 (range, 0-360) days. The median time from the first consultation to a definitive diagnosis was 21 (range, 0-350) days; 25% were diagnosed more than 52 days after presentation. Bonesetters were initially consulted by 37% of these patients. From presentation to diagnosis, the median duration was 61 (range, 4-361) days. Analysis of the duration of pre-diagnosis symptoms did not correlate significantly with the development of metastatic disease, response to chemotherapy, feasibility of limb salvage surgery, relapse rates, or survival rates.
  • CONCLUSIONS
    • In Hong Kong, initial consultation to bonesetters was common. A relatively long delay in between symptom onset and diagnosis of osteosarcoma was encountered. The public and medical practitioners should be made aware of this disease, especially in adolescents.