2026 年 32 巻 1 号 論文ID: cr.25-00214
Giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB) rarely metastasizes, but pulmonary lesions pose therapeutic challenges. We report a woman in her 30s who developed multiple bilateral lung nodules 3.5 years after distal ulna GCTB resection and local recurrences. Denosumab 120 mg every 4 weeks was given for 2.5 years, producing shrinkage, calcification, and stability. Staged, palpation-guided thoracoscopic wedge resections (8 left, 5 right) achieved complete macroscopic clearance with negative margins. Histology showed spindle-cell proliferation with woven bone and depletion of giant cells; H3.3 G34W immunostaining confirmed metastatic GCTB. She remains recurrence-free 7 years and 5 months after metastasectomy. Denosumab displayed site-specific surgical implications—unfavorable at the primary bone site due to peritumoral sclerosis, yet advantageous in the lung where it clarifies margins and enables parenchyma-sparing R0 resection. A surgery-forward strategy that uses time-limited denosumab as a bridge to meticulous thoracoscopic metastasectomy may secure durable control in multifocal pulmonary GCTB.