Tumours Around the Sub-Acromial Bursa

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(Benign and Malignant Lumps That Can Imitate Bursitis)

A painless lump or persistent shoulder pain deserves a prompt scan.
Early diagnosis saves bone, function, and sometimes life.

Why read this leaflet?

  • The majority of painful shoulders are due to soft-tissue conditions (e.g., bursitis or tendon tears).
  • A small minority are caused by tumours growing in, or near, the bones around the sub-acromial bursa (the natural cushion under your acromion).
  • Recognising the warning signs means you and your doctor can arrange the right scans quickly.

What types of tumour occur here?

Category

Typical examples

Usual behaviour

Benign (non-cancerous)

Lipoma (fat lump), benign osteochondroma (bony lump), simple bone cyst

Grow slowly, rarely spread

Borderline / locally aggressive

Giant-cell tumour, aneurysmal bone cyst

Can erode bone; may recur if not removed fully

Malignant (cancerous)

Osteosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, chondrosarcoma, secondary spread from breast, prostate or lung cancer

Invade bone and may spread to lungs

Symptoms that raise suspicion

  • Hard or painless lump on or behind the shoulder
  • New swelling following only minor injury
  • Pain that wakes you at night
  • Unexplained fractures after minimal force
  • Reduced movement that does not improve with rest or physiotherapy
  • Unexplained weight loss or night sweats

Key point: A lump noticed after an injury often pre-dates the bump; the knock simply draws attention to it.

 

How are tumours diagnosed?

  1. Clinical exam– doctor checks size, tenderness, and shoulder function.
  2. Plain X-ray– shows bone structure; many malignant tumours have a recognisable pattern.
  3. MRI or CT– defines extent and soft-tissue involvement.
  4. Core needle biopsy– small tissue sample analysed by a specialist bone-tumour pathologist.
  5. Blood tests & chest imaging– look for spread or other causes.

Treatment principles

Tumour type

Typical management

Benign lipoma / osteochondroma

Surgical removal only if painful, growing, or cosmetically troublesome

Simple bone cyst

Observation ± steroid injection or bone graft packing

Giant-cell tumour

Extended curettage, bone-cement filling, ± drug therapy (denosumab)

Primary bone cancers

Combined care in a specialist sarcoma centre – limb-sparing surgery, chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy

Metastatic lesions

Treat primary cancer, stabilise bone (cement or metal rod), pain control

Early referral to a regional sarcoma MDT (multidisciplinary team) is essential for any suspected malignancy.

Clinical pearls

  • Lipomas are common around the shoulder and often blamed for pain that actually comes from a tendon injury.
  • A single bone cyst in a child’s humerus may fracture painlessly and mimic a sports injury.
  • Osteosarcoma under age 25; chondrosarcoma over age 40; metastasis over age 60 are typical age rules of thumb.
  • The tumour team must plan biopsy – an ill-placed biopsy can complicate later curative surgery.

00Patient FAQs

Is every lump cancer?
No. Most shoulder lumps are benign; however, only imaging (and sometimes biopsy) can say for sure.

Will surgery weaken my arm?
Modern limb-sparing techniques use plates, rods or custom implants to maintain strength. Rehabilitation is key.

If a tumour is benign, can I leave it alone?
Often yes, provided it is pain-free, not enlarging, and confirmed by imaging. Regular review is advised.

Do small injuries cause cancer?
Current evidence suggests bumps draw attention to an existing lesion rather than create one.

Call-to-Action

Concerned about a lump or stubborn shoulder pain?
Phone 020 3384 5588 

Email info@TheArmDoc.co.uk 

 Visit www.TheArmDoc.co.uk

Disclaimer

This leaflet offers general information, not personalised medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for assessment and treatment of any shoulder problem.

 

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