Paget Disease
- Can be divided into stages;
- An initial osteolytic stage
- Followed by a mixed osteoclastic-osteoblastic stage which ends in a predominance of osteroblastic activity
- Eventually evolves into a burnt out osteosclerotic stage
- An initial osteolytic stage
- Usually begins in middle age and gets more common with increasing age
- Geographical and racial variation
Pathogenesis
- Current evidence suggests it is caused by a slow virus infection such as paramyxovirus
- Possible that virally infected cells produce IL-6 and M-CSF which are potent recruiters and stimulators of osteoclasts
- Other evidence suggests that osteoclasts may be hyperresponsive to RANKL signalling and vitamin D
- Occasionally it is associated with an inherited component with predisposition linked to a locus on chromosome 18
Morphology
- It is a focal disease with much variation in the stage of disease at different sites
- Histological hallmark is the mosaic pattern of lamellar bone
- In the initial lytic phase there are waves of osteoclastic activity and numerous reabsorption pits
- Osteoclasts are abnormally large containing more than the normal number of 10-12 nuclei
- The newly formed bone may be woven or lamellar but eventually all is remodelled into lamellar bone
- As the cell activity decreases the fibrovascular tissue that developed in the marrow adjacent to the bone forming surface recedes and is replaced with normal marrow.
- In the end the bone is thickened an composed of course thickened trabeculae and the cortices are soft and porous and lack structural stability
Clinical course
- Most cases are mild and are discovered incidentally radiologically
- Disease can produce a variety of skeletal, neuromuscular and cardiovcascular complications
- Diagnosis made radiologically and via measurement of high levels of alkaline phosphatase and increased urine secretion of hydroxyproline
- Affects one bone in 15% of cases – tibia, ilium, femur, skull, vertebrae, humerus
- Polystotic disease affects the pelvis, spine and skull
- Pain in the most common feature and is localised to the affected bone
- Pain is caused by microfractures and bone overgrowth that compresses on the spinal and cranial nerve roots
- The overgrowth of the craniofacial skeleton may make the head too heavy for the patient to hold up
- Weakness of the base of the skull may lead to compression of the posterior fossa structures
- Weight bearing can distort the femoral heads and cause secondary osteoarthritis
- Chalkstick type fractures occur in the long bones of the lower linb
- Compression fractures can occur in the spine
- The hypervascularity of Paget bone warms the overlying skin. In severe polyostotis disease the increased blood flow behaves as a arteriovenous shunt leading to high output cardiac failure and exacerbation of underlying disease
- A variety of tumours can develop in Paget bone;
- Benign tumours include giant cell tumour, giant cell reparative granuloma and extraosseous masses of haematopoesis.
- Malignancy – sarcomas, osteosarcomas, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, chondrosarcoma. Arise in the long bones, skull, pelvis and spin
- Most patients have mild disease however and are managed with calcitonin and bisphosphonates