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Bone pain: Information for clinicians

You should suspect that pain is of bony origin if there are known bone metastases or a cancer which commonly spreads to bone e.g. breast, lung, renal, prostate.

Bone pain can be extremely debilitating because it affects function in so many ways. The treatment priorities are first getting pain relieved to allow sleep, then when sitting up and finally when moving about.

Red flags

The two things to bear in mind are:

  1. Cord compression from worsening vertebral metastases. Symptoms are worsening pain or heavy legs. 
  2. Risk of pathological fracture in a long bone. Symptoms are sudden worse pain on weight bearing.

Consider urgent scanning for rapidly changing pain.

Clinical features

Bone pain is usually well localised, might be worse on weight bearing (depending on site) and may be tender to touch. Often throbs at night.

An initial approach to treatment
  • Apply hot or cold packs
  • Paracetamol and NSAIDs - alongside a PPI.
  • A COX-2 inhibitor such as Celecoxib may be a good option
  • Titration of a strong opioid - e.g. titrate oral Morphine solution from 2.5mgs 4 hourly
  • A prn dose of analgesia before planned activity may help e.g. before a walk
  • Consider a trial of Lidocaine 5% plaster if the bone pain is very superficial e.g. a rib metastasis
  • Urgent control for severe bone pain - Dexamethasone 6mg a day for 5 days and then review (a good response to steroids may be an indication to refer for radiotherapy)
Specialist care
  • Radiotherapy is always considered for persistent metastatic bone pain. Often a single fraction is used. May cause a pain flare initially - cover with steroids.
  • Bisphosphonates intravenously (eg Zometa) to reduce skeletal events due to bone metastases, but can also help pain. There may be a role for oral bisphosphonates. 
  • Denosumab is a subcutaneous option that oncologists may recommend instead of bisphosphonates, but is much more costly
  • Prophylactic surgery can be dramatically helpful to prevent a pathological fracture and help pain

Recommended Resources

ESMO Cancer pain Guidelines

Published 24th July 2018

The BMJ Clinical Review - Cancer induced bone pain

Published 29th January 2015

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T. 0800 090 2309

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Find information and support through the telephone helpline and online chat via their website.

Other services include Marie Curie nurses, Hospice care, helper and companion services.

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NCL Palliative Advice Team
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T. 020 8152 3252

W. https://northlondonhospice.org/get-support/out-of-hours-telephone-advice

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The telephone service is available 8.00pm to 8.00am, seven days a week.

Community palliative care teams

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Please contact the team between Monday to Sunday 9.00am to 5.00pm and Monday to Sunday 5.00pm to 8.00pm call the switchboard on 020 3456 7890 and ask for air-call palliative care team.

Palliative Specialist Community Care - North Camden
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T. 020 7830 2905

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St John's Hospice Inpatient unit
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St John's Hospice Inpatient unit

T. 020 7806 4040 / 07725 258767

W. https://www.stjohnshospice.org.uk/our-care/inpatient-care

St. John's Hospice provides inpatient palliative care services to the residents of Brent, Central London and West London.

This is an inpatient unit with 18 beds

Please contact for admissions for advice and Community Specialist Palliative Care.

The office hours are Monday to Friday 8.30am to 4.30pm. Referrals received in the morning are triaged the same afternoon, and those received in the afternoon are triaged the following working day.

If urgent, please follow up the referral by calling us on 020 7806 4040. Out of hours, urgent referrals will be discussed with the consultant on call.

Referral form for clinician use only.

Community Specialist Palliative Care Referral Form V4.2 (DOCX)

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