Title: Case Report
1Radiological Category
Principal Modality (1) Principal Modality (2)
Musculoskeletal
General Radiography
CT/MRI
Case Report
Submitted by
Robbie Honey
Date accepted
30 August 2007
Faculty Reviewer Sandra A. A. Oldham, MD
2Case History
- 16 year-old African American male who presents
with 3 weeks of pain and swelling in his left
thigh. Pain is gradually getting worse (greatest
amount 5/10) as well as the swelling. The pain
is worse with activity and bending the leg.
There is no history of trauma or fall. Parents
have also noticed the patient has begun to limp.
Patient has taken pain medication only once.
3Radiological Presentations
4Radiological Presentations
5Radiological Presentations
Non-contrast CT
6Radiological Presentations
T1 Post Contrast
T2
7Test Your Diagnosis
Which one of the following is your choice for the
appropriate diagnosis? After your selection, go
to next page.
- Conventional osteosarcoma
- Parosteal osteosarcoma
- High grade surface osteosarcoma
- Dedifferentiated parosteal osteosarcoma
- Osteochondroma
- Periosteal osteosarcoma
-
8The conventional radiograph shows an extensive
osseous tumor involving the diaphysis of the left
femur with a cumulus cloud appearance. There
is a marked sunburst type periosteal reaction
that is prominent on the medial aspect of the
femur. The tumor appears largely cortically
based with extension into the surrounding soft
tissues and likely medullary involvement. No
pathological fractures. CT shows that the lesion
is predominantly on the surface of the femur. In
addition there is extension into the soft tissue
with a large central component that is not
mineralized. MRI shows similar findings to CT
with areas of low signal on T1 corresponding to
dense mineralization as well as a large soft
tissue mass with an area of non-enhancement
likely representing necrosis. In addition,
within the medullary cavity there is diminished
T1 signal intensity and increased T2 signal
intensity representing either peritumoral edema
or infiltrative extension of the tumor.
Findings and Differentials
Findings
Differentials
- Parosteal osteosarcoma
- High-grade surface osteosarcoma
- Periosteal osteosarcoma
- Dedifferentiated parosteal osteosarcoma
9 OS survival
Parosteal OS 4 gt 90 Dedifferentiated
POS 1 lt 10 Periosteal OS 1 gt 80 High-grade
surface OS 1 lt 10
J A
10Discussion
- Parosteal osteosarcoma is the most common surface
osteosarcoma, typically affecting patients in the
second to fifth decades of life and women more
commonly. They typically occur in the long
tubular bones, with the femur being the
predominant site. Parosteal osteosarcomas are
particularly common on the posterior surface of
the distal portion of the femur and typically
arise in a metaphyseal location. - The radiographic abnormalities are highly
characteristic. A large, radiodense, oval, or
spheroid mass possessing lobulated or irregular
margins is evident. Typically, it is attached in
a sessile fashion to the external cortex. A thin
radiolucent line, or cleavage plane, may separate
the remaining portion of the tumor from the
underlying bone. Overall the tumors tend to have
a mushroom-like configuration. Involvement of
the medullary cavity is minimal. - Grossly the tumors are rock-hard, ivory white,
and well defined with a sharp interface between
the tumor and overlying soft tissues. - Histologically these are generally regarded as
low-grade osteosarcoma. - Treatment is complete surgical extirpation, with
local recurrence of 100 if incomplete removal.
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13Discussion
- Dedifferentiated parosteal osteosarcoma
represents a tumor in which there is association
between conventional parosteal osteosarcoma and
high-grade sarcoma (osteo, fibro, or malignant
fibrous histiocytoma) and can occur either
primarily or secondarily. Most common from 3rd
to 5th decades and women greater then men. Most
commonly the posterior distal femur is involved. - Radiographically, appears very similar to
conventional parosteal osteosarcoma. However
frequently there are areas of lucency that may
correspond to areas of high grade tumor within
low grade tumor. In addition, arteriograms often
show localized hypervascularity that tends to
correspond to areas of high grade sarcoma.
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16Discussion
17Discussion
- Periosteal osteosarcoma is an infrequent neoplasm
that predominates in the second and third decades
of life. Involvement of the diaphysis of a long
tubular bone, especially the femur or tibia, is
typical. - Periosteal osteosarcomas are variable in size and
on radiographs appear as lesions on the bone
surface. The tumor is limited to the cortex,
which is thickened and irregular externally this
feature is commonly accompanied by
nonhomogeneous, radiating osseous spicules that
extend from the superficial region of the cortex
into the adjacent soft tissues and are linear and
perpedicular to the long axis of the parent bone.
Attachment tends to be broad based. It should
be emphasized that the medullary cavity, with
rare exception, is uninvolved. - Histologically, periosteal osteosarcoma is a form
of relatively low to intermediate grade
chondroblastic osteosarcoma arising from the bone
surface.
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20Discussion
- High-grade surface osteosarcoma is the least
common of all the forms of osteosarcoma. It
occurs most often in the second and third
decades. Men are more commonly affected (41).
The femur is the most common location. - There are no radiographic features that are
specific to HGS. It may appear as a radiolucent
mass with minimal intralesional calcification on
the surface of the involved bone and thus mimic
periosteal osteosarcoma. Alternatively, it may
form a radiopaque sunburst lesion confined to
the periosteal surface and overlying soft
tissues. - Grossly, HGS is not rock-hard, well defined,
bosselated, and ivory white such as conventional
perosteal osteosarcoma. Primary dedifferentiated
OS also has these features. Additionally HGS
does not have the appearance of well-formed,
grayish blue hyaline cartilage such as periosteal
OS. - Histologically, the hallmark of HGS is the
presence of pure, high-grade sarcoma.
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23Discussion
- The gold standard in imaging diagnosis of
osteosarcoma remains the conventional - radiograph. CT, MRI, and radionuclide
examination are more useful for defining - the extent of the neoplasm, including metastases,
and its relationship to - surrounding neurovascular structures. On MRI the
neoplasm is typically of low - signal intensity on T1-weighted spin echo, high
intensity on T2 weighted images, - and enhances with IV gadolinium.
- The distinction between dedifferentiated
parosteal OS and high grade surface OS - requires the use of histology and gross
correlation. - The distinction between high grade neoplasms
(parosteal OS / HGS) and low grade - neoplasms is important because of the indication
for chemotherapy in high grade - lesions.
24Osteosarcoma, osteoblastic, high grade
(High-grade surface osteosarcoma vs.
dediffentiated parosteal osteosarcoma)
Diagnosis
25Miller, Mark D. Review of Orthopaedics. 4th
ed. Saunders, 2004. 264-265.Raymond, Kevin A.
Surface Osteosarcoma. In Clinical
Orthopaedics. Vol. 270. September, 1991. 140
148.Resnick, Donald. Krandorf, Mark J. Tumor
and Tumor-Like Lesions of Bone Imaging and
Pathology of Specific Lesions. In Bone and
Joint Imaging. 3rd Edition. Elsevier Saunders,
2005. 1131-1139.Wang, Lisa L. Chintagumpala,
Murali. Gebhardt, Mark C. Osteosarcoma
Epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical
presentation, diagnosis, and histology.
www.uptodate.com. Chart, pathology, and
radiographic example slides adapted with the
permission of A. Kevin Raymond, M.D., M.D.
Anderson Cancer Center
References