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 Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders

= OSTEOCLASTOMA = OSTEOBLASTOCLASTOMA = TUMOR OF MYELOPLEXUS

= nonmineralized eccentric lytic meta-epiphyseal lesion involving a long bone with extension to subarticular bone in the skeletally mature patient (= with closed physis)

Origin: probably arises from zone of intense osteoclastic activity (of endochondral ossification) in skeletally immature patients

Frequency: 5% of all primary bone tumors; 20% of benign skeletal tumors; unusually high prevalence in China + southern India

Path: friable vascular stroma of numerous thin-walled capillaries with necrosis + hemorrhage + cyst formation (DDx: aneurysmal bone cyst without solid areas)

Histo: large number of multinucleated osteoclastic giant cells in a diffuse distribution in a background of ovoid mononuclear cells intermixed throughout a spindle cell stroma (DDx: giant cells characteristic of all reactive bone disease as in pigmented villonodular synovitis, benign chondroblastoma, nonosteogenic fibroma, chondromyxoid fibroma, fibrous dysplasia)

Peak age: 3rd (range, 2nd–4th) decade; <3% below age 14; 80% between 20 and 50 years; 13% >age 50; M÷F = 1÷1.1 to 1÷1.5 (in spine 1÷2.5)

May be associated with: Paget disease located in skull + facial bones (50–60%), pelvis, spine

Hormonal stimulation: occasionally dramatic increase in size during pregnancy

Staging:

Location:

Site:

  1. eccentric metaepiphyseal (42–93%) = in metaphysis of long bones adjacent to ossified epiphyseal line
  2. extension to within 1 cm of subarticular bone (85–99%) after fusion of epiphyseal plate (MOST TYPICAL)
  3. intraarticular extension possible / transarticular spread (rare)

The open epiphyseal plate acts as a barrier to tumor growth!

X-Ray:

NUC:

Angio:

CT:

MR: (nonspecific!)

Cx: in <1% malignant transformation into high-grade sarcoma within first 9 years (M÷F = 3÷1) after radiation treatment / spontaneously after 19 years

Prognosis: ± locally aggressive; 10–20–90% recurrence rate within first 3 years after initial treatment

Dx: core needle / open bone biopsy

Rx: arterial embolization before surgery / for palliation; curettage + bone grafting (40–60% recurrence); curettage with filling of void with high-speed burr and polymethylmethacrylate (15–25% recurrence); wide resection (7% recurrence) + reconstruction with allografts / metal prosthesis; radiation therapy for inoperable GCT (39–63% recurrence); denosumab

DDx:

  1. Aneurysmal bone cyst (contains only cystic regions WITHOUT enhancing soft-tissue component; in posterior elements of spine)
  2. Brown tumor of HPT (lab values, multicentric)
  3. Expansile lytic bone metastasis (primary renal / thyroid carcinoma)
  4. Plasmacytoma / multiple myeloma
  5. Chondroblastoma (extensive surrounding soft-tissue + marrow edema, sclerotic margin, central “rings-and-arcs” matrix)
  6. Clear cell chondrosarcoma
  7. Osteosarcoma subtypes: telangiectatic, giant cell-rich, fibroblastic
  8. Osteoblastoma
  9. Nonossifying fibroma
  10. Bone abscess
  11. Hemangioma
  12. Fibrous dysplasia
  13. Giant cell reparative granuloma

Benign Metastasizing Giant Cell Tumor (1–6%)  !!navigator!!

Cause: locally aggressive lesion / local recurrence / lesion of distal radius

  • lung metastasis

Multifocal Giant Cell Tumor  !!navigator!!

= additional GCTs (up to a maximum of 20) developing synchronously / metachronously for up to 20 years without increased risk of pulmonary metastases

Frequency:<1% of all GCT cases

Age: 25 years (range, 11–62 years); M<F

May be associated with:

Paget disease, usually polyostotic (GCT develops at a mean age of 61 years + after an average time lapse of 12 years) with involvement of skull + facial bones

Location: increased prevalence for hands + feet

Malignant Giant Cell Tumor  !!navigator!!

= group of giant cell–containing lesions capable of malignant behavior + pulmonary metastases

Prevalence: 5–10% of all GCTs

Age: older than patients with benign GCTs

Types:

  1. Benign metastasizing GCT
    Prevalence: 1–5%
    • pulmonary metastases may remain stable / regress spontaneously
    • pulmonary nodules may show peripheral ossification

    Prognosis: death in 13%
  2. Primary malignant transformation of GCT
    = malignant tumor of bone composed of sarcomatous growth juxtaposed to zones of typical benign GCT without a history of radiation therapy / repeated curettage / resection
    Prognosis: median survival time of 4 years
  3. Secondary malignant GCT (86%)
    = sarcomatous growth that occurs at a site of previously documented GCT usually after radiation therapy (80%) / repeated resections
    Prognosis: median survival time of 1 year
  4. Osteoclastic (giant cell) sarcoma
    = highly malignant tumor composed of anaplastic osteoclast-like giant cells without tumor osteoid / bone / cartilage

 Outline