Title: Paediatric Bone Tumours
1Paediatric Bone Tumours
- William Aston
- Consultant Sarcoma and Joint Reconstruction
Surgeon - Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital
- Stanmore
- Paedriatric Revision Course 2009
2Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Diagnosis
- Staging
- Benign
- Malignant
- Treatment
3Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Diagnosis
- - History
- - Examination
- - Imaging
- At any stage Tertiary referral to MDT
4Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Staging - Characterise the lesion
- - Examination
- - X ray
- - U/S /- Angiogram
- - CT
- - MRI /- Whole Body
- - Bone Scan
- - PET
5Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Staging - Characterise the lesion
-
- - If MDT not sure of diagnosis then Biopsy
- Benign
- Malignant - Image whole compartment
- - Distant Staging
-
- CT Chest, Bone Scan, PET, Whole body MRI
6Classification of Tumours
- Enneking W F. A system of staging
musculoskeletal neoplasms. Clin Orthop. 1986
204 9-24. - 1 Low grade
- 2 High grade
- 3 Any grade with metastases
- A Intracompartmental
- B Extracompartmental
7Considerations before biopsy
- Mankin H J, Lange T A, Spanier S S. The hazards
of biopsy in patients with malignant primary bone
and soft-tissue tumours. J. Bone and Joint Surg.
1982 64-A 1121-27. -
- Biopsy complication rate 3-5 times higher when
performed by an inexperienced surgeon than by a
member of the MSTS - If the surgeon or institution is not equipped
to investigate the patient appropriately, perform
definitive surgery and administer adjuvant
therapy then the patient should be referred to a
treatment centre before biopsy
8Considerations before biopsy
- Open vs Needle Biopsy
- Always needle if possible
- In line of surgical incision
- Experienced Person
- Direct route
- Tract marking
- Dont contaminate other compartments
9The ideal biopsy
- - Adequate volume of representative tissue
- - Carefully planned site
- - Minimal contamination
- - Appropriately prepared specimen
- - Examined by expert pathologist
10Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Benign
- - Bone forming
- - Cartilage forming
- - Fibrous and Cystic tumours
- - Others
11Classification by anatomy
12Classification by cell type
13Behaviour
- Benign/latent
- Slow growth during normal growth of individual,
then stop. Never become malignant. (Non-ossifying
fibroma) - Benign/active
- Progressive growth (Aneurysmal bone cyst)
- Benign/aggressive
- Locally aggressive but do not metastasize. There
is a pseudocapsule with tumour extension into the
reactive zone. Local control can only be achieved
by complete removal of the lesion. (Giant-cell
tumour)
14Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Benign Bone Forming
- - Osteoid Osteoma
- - Osteoblastoma
15Osteoid Osteoma
- MgtF
- Any bone- cortical
- Classic hx pain
- -Night pain
- -Relieved by salicylate
- Xray, bone scan, CT
- lt 1cm
- Rx by
- -Radiofrequency ablation
- -(Excision)
16Radiofrequency ablation
76 good response after 1 treatment 92 good
response after 2 treatments Safe NICE approval
March 2004
17Osteoblastoma
- 1 bone tumours
- MF 31
- Spine sacrum
- gt1cm
- Rx curettage
- -Saqlik et al 2007
- -20 pts
- -13 local recurrence
- Must exclude osteoblastic osteosarcoma
18Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Benign Cartilage Forming
- - Enchondroma
- - Osteochondroma
- - Chondroblastoma
- - Chondromyxoid fibroma
-
19Enchondroma
- Intramedullary lesion
- Hands feet
- Rx Curettage /- grafting
20Enchondroma - Olliers
- Multiple hereditary enchondromas
- 25-30 at chance of developing chondrosarcoma _at_
40yrs - Regular surveillance
21Enchondroma Maffuccis Syndrome
- Multiple enchondromata haemangiomas
- Risk of malignancy 25-100
22Osteochondroma
- Developmental malformation
- 90 solitary
- Distal femur, prox tibia, prox humerus
- Malignant transformation in 1
- MRI if suspicious- cartilage cap gt1cm thick
malignant - Excision if symptomatic or suspicious
23Multiple hereditary ostechondromas (diaphyseal
aclasis)
- Autosomal dominant
- Malignant transformation 0.5-3
- Regular surveillance
- N.B. pelvic lesions
24Chondroblastoma
- Rare
- 10-25yrs, MgtF
- 75 in long bones
- Epiphyseal
- MRI biopsy
- Rx curettage
25Chondromyxoid fibroma
- lt2 bone tumours
- Any site
- Eccentric, expansile
- Scalloped, eroded cortex
- Sclerotic margin 80
- Calcified 2
- Rx curettage
- 15 recurrence
26Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Benign Fibrous and Cystic
- - Fibrous Dysplasia
- - Non Ossifying Fibroma/ Fibrous cortical defect
- - Unicamral (Simple) Bone Cyst
- - Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
27Fibrous dysplasia
- Location
- 35 head
- 35 femur/tibia
- 30 ribs
- Monostotic or polyostotic (NB McCune-Albright Sy)
- Rx
- observation
- bisphosphonatess for pain
- osteotomy/internal fixation
28Osteofibrous dysplasia
- Tibia
- 10-15 yr olds
- Variant of FD
- Must distinguish from
- Adamantinoma
- Surgery if symptomatic
29McCune Albright Syndrome
- Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
- Café au lait spots (coast of Maine)
- Endocrinopathy
30Fibrous cortical defect Non ossifying fibroma
- FCD lt 1 cm, NOF gt 1 cm
- Characteristic x-ray appearance
- Asymptomatic
- No treatment required
31Simple/unicameral bone cyst
- ? Caused by Inc. PGE2
- MF 21
- Prox femur prox humerus
- _at_ 25-50 will sustain pathological
32Treatment of SBC
- Observation until resolution
33Treatment of SBC
- Observation until resolution
- Fracture may stimulate resolution
- Aspiration steroid injection
- Aspiration bone marrow injection
- Curettage /- grafting
- Nancy nails
34Aneurysmal bone cyst
- Metaphyseal
- Max diameter of tumour gt max diameter of physis
- MRI Bx indicated
- - Must exclude telangiectatic osteosarcoma
- Embolisation curettage
- Occasionally requires excision
35Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Benign Others
- - Giant Cell Tumour
- - Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
36Giant Cell Tumour
- Young adults FM 1.51
- Most commonly distal femur, prox tibia
- Osteoclast rich
- MRI biopsy indicated
37Eosinophilic Granuloma / histiocytosis X /
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
- Any bone
- Usually diaphyseal
- Bx to exclude Ewings sarcoma
- Rx chemotherapy
38Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Malignant
- - Osteosarcoma
- - Ewings Sarcoma (MRCT)
- Other tumours that present with bone lesions in
Children
39Behaviour
- Malignant/Low-grade
- Low potential to metastasize. There is a
pseudocapsule and tumour nodules exist within the
reactive zone but rarely beyond. Local control by
excision of normal cuff of tissue. (Parosteal
osteosarcoma) - Malignant/High-grade
- Rapid growth and early metastasis. Require local
control and systemic therapy to prevent
metastasis. (Osteosarcoma)
40Analysis of radiograph
AGGRESSIVE
wide transition, ill-defined margin
- margin
- pattern
- cortical response
- soft-tissue mass
- periosteal reaction
- matrix
moth-eaten, permeative
destroyed
often
spiculated, onion-skin, interrupted
/ - bone (OS) cartilage (CS)
41Osteosarcoma
- Conventional central OS
- Age 10-25 years
- Site
- -Distal femur
- -Proximal tibia
- -Proximal humerus
- -Pelvis
- -Spine
- -Jaw
- Histology
- Osteoblastic
- Chondroblastic
- Fibroblastic
- Mixed
- Osteoclast rich
- Telangiectatic
-
42CENTRAL OSTEOSARCOMA
CLASSICAL FEATURES Aggressive bone forming tumour
Mixed lytic/sclerotic Metaphyseal
43CENTRAL OSTEOSARCOMA
VARIANTS Densely sclerotic
44CENTRAL OSTEOSARCOMA
VARIANTS Lytic OS 10-13 cases
45Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Prognostic factors - Osteosarcoma
- Mets at diagnosis p gt 0.0001
- Axial Location p .005
- Necrosis lt90 p .001
- Raised Alk Phos p .002
- Proximal vs Distal p .002
- Amputation vs LSS p .04
William Aston
46Malignant Round Cell Tumours
- Age
- - Neuroblastoma - 1-5 years
- - Ewing/PNET - 5-15 years
- - 1o Bone Lymphoma - gt30 years
- Site
- - Femur, humerus, tibia, flat bones
- - Pelvis
- - Red Marrow distribution dependant
- Radiologically similar
- - Permeative bone destruction
- - Large ST mass
47EWINGS SARCOMA
- Described 1921 by James Ewing
- t1122 translocation
- Historical good response to R/T
- But systemic relapse
- Chemotherapy dramatically improved survival
- Prognostic factors
- Mets at diagnosis (especially bone)
- Systemically unwell (fever, raised ESR)
- Large tumours
- Axial tumours
- Poor response to chemotherapy
48MRCT
EWING SARCOMA Cortical saucerization
49MRCT
EWING SARCOMA Metadiaphyseal Periosteal reaction
-hair-on-end - onion skinning
50Ewings sarcoma cortex apparently intact
51MRCT
PELVIC EWING SARCOMA Affects older age group
52STAGING Incidence of metastases
- Osteo Ewings
-
- Bone Scan lt5 10
- CT Chest 10 25
- MRI - skip 5 2
- Incidence size ie. 5cm 5, 10cm 10
53Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Treatment
- Neo-adjuvant
- Surgical excision, ablation/salvage
- Adjuvant
- Os Adriamycin, Cisplatin, HDMTX, Ifosfamide
- Ewings Adriamycin, Ifos, Vincristine,
etoposide, Actinomycin D - /- Radiotherapy - margins
- Survival
William Aston
54Classification of Surgical Procedures by Margin
55Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Salvage vs Ablation.
- - Neurovascular status.
- - Joint involvement.
- - Is it reconstructable after a wide margin?
- Autograft, Eg. Fibula, ECI
- Allograft
- Endoprosthesis
- - Function? If not ablative surgery
56Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Malignant tumours that present with bone lesions
- - Neuroblastoma
- - Leukimia
- - Lymphoma of bone
- - Clear Cell sarcoma of the Kidney (Wilms)
- - Retinoblastoma
- - Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma
- - Hepatoblastoma
57Paediatric Bone Tumours
58Paediatric Bone Tumours
- Thank You
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- Osteomyelitis
- DD Infection, Metabolic, Tumour
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