Improving the effectiveness of cancer treatments makes it possible to lengthen patient survival. It is therefore important to ensure that the quality of life is also maintained by reducing pain and handicap. Some cancers tend to spread to the bone. The bone locations of cancer can weaken the bone and lead to complications such as fractures, pain, or compression of neurological structures. To avoid such complications, weekly multidisciplinary meetings (MM) bring together specialists (oncologists, rheumatologists, cancer surgeons, radiologists, radiotherapists, etc.) to discuss the files of patients with bone lesions from cancer. They offer specific treatments adapted to each patient to treat or reduce the risk of complications. The OOSLOH study aims to collect clinical, biological, and imaging data from patients for whom a discussion took place in bone dedicated MM. Based on these data, epidemiological studies could be carried out to better understand the clinical factors leading cancer to colonize bone. But also to determine the factors making it possible to prevent or better treat bone complications and improve the quality of life of patients. This study does not require any examinations or additional visits to the patient
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
5,000
Percentage of alive patients
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 10 years
Percentage of patients without bone disease recurrence
Time frame: within one year after the multidisciplinary meeting
Time to bone disease recurrence
Time frame: through study completion, an average of 10 years
Number of bone recurrence Number of bone recurrence
Time frame: At each presentation of the patient file's to the MM,on average every week
Epidemiological datas
Time frame: At the first presentation of patient's file to the MM, on average every week
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