Chapter 26: Bone Tumors and Tumor-Like Lesions Flashcards

1
Q

How does osteoid osteoma differ from osteoblastoma in terms of size and bone predilection?

A
  • Osteoid osteoma: <2cm in diameter; predilection for appendicular skeleton (50% involve femur or tibia) arising in cortex
  • Osteoblastoma: are >2cm and involve posterior spine (laminae and pedicles)
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2
Q

How does the pain and responsiveness to aspirin/NSAIDs differ between osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma?

A
  • Both are painful, and the pain is typically worse at night
  • Osteoid osteoma DOES respond to aspirin/NSAIDs
  • Osteoblastoma DOES NOT respond!
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3
Q

What is a radiographic clue for osteoid osteoma?

A
  • Thick rind of reactive cortical bone; surrounding a nidus
  • Osteoid osteomas elicit formaion of a tremendous amount of reactive bone
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4
Q

Describe the characteristic morphology of osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma?

A

Haphazardly interconnecting trabeculae of woven bone that are rimmed by prominent osteoblasts

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5
Q

Which histologic features of osteoid osteomas and osteoblastomas help to distinguish them from osteosarcomas?

A

Relatively small size, well-defined margins, and benign cytologic features of the neoplastic osteoblasts

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6
Q

What is the bimodal age of distribution seen with osteosarcoma; which sex is most affected?

A
  • 75% occur in pt’s <20 y/o
  • 2nd peak in older adults (>65 y/o), frequently in assoc. w/ Paget disease, bone infarcts, and prior radiation
  • Men more commonly affected
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7
Q

Which part of bones do osteosarcomas arise in and which bones are most often affected?

A
  • Arise in metaphyseal region of long bones of extremities
  • Almost 50% occur about the knee (i.e., distal femur or prox. tibia)
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8
Q

How do osteosarcomas typically present?

A
  • Painful, progressively enlarging mass
  • Sometimes sudden fracture is the 1st sx
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9
Q

What are the characteristic X-ray findings with osteosarcoma?

A
  • Large destructive, mixed lytic and blastic mass w/ infiltrative margins
  • Frequently breaks thru periosteum, resulting in reactive periosteal bone formation –> Codman triangle = elevated periosteum
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10
Q

Germline mutation in what gene are associated with a 1000-fold increased risk for osteosarcoma; occurence in sporadic tumors?

A
  • Germline mutation in RB = 1000-fold ↑ risk
  • This mutation is present in up to 70% of sporadic tumors
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11
Q

Li-Fraumeni syndrome is associated with what germline mutation; have an increased risk for what MSK pathology?

A
  • Germline TP53 mutations
  • Greatly ↑ risk of osteosarcoma
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12
Q

Why do osteosarcomas peak in incidence around the time of the adolescent growth spurt and how does this relate to their location?

A
  • Occur most frequently in the region of the growth plate in bones with the fastest growth
  • The ↑ proliferation at these sites may predispose to mutations
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13
Q

Which morphological feature of osteosarcomas is diagnostic; what is seen?

A
  • Formation of bone by the tumor cells = diagnostic
  • Neoplastic bone usually has fine, lace-like architecture but also may be deposited in broad sheets of primitive trabeculae
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14
Q

When malignant cartilage is abundant in osteosarcomas they are referred to as what?

A

Chondroblastic osteosarcoma

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15
Q

Osteosarcomas frequently metastasize via which route and to where?

A

Hematogenously to the lungs, bone, and brain

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16
Q

How is osteoid osteoma vs. osteoblastoma treated?

A
  • Osteoid osteoma is frequently treated w/ radiofrequency ablation
  • Osteoblastoma is usually curetted or excised en bloc
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17
Q

What is the multi-modality approach to tx of osteosarcomas?

A
  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, which is given under the assumption that all pt’s have occult metastases at time of dx
  • Followed by surgery
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18
Q

What is the most common benign bone tumor?

A

Osteochondroma (aka exostosis)

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19
Q

Majority (85%) of osteochondroma arise how and the remainder are associated with what herediatry disease?

A
  • 85% are solitary; arise in early adulthood w/ men 3x > women
  • Remainder assoc. w/ multiple hereditary exostosis syndrome, an autosomal dominant hereditary disease
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20
Q

Where in bone do osteochondromas arise and which bones most often affected?

A
  • Only bones of endochondral origin and arise from the metaphysis near the growth plate
  • Long tubular bones, especially near knee
  • Occasionally seen in bones of pelvis, scapula,andribs
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21
Q

Hereditary osteochondroma (exostoses) and some sporadic types are assoc. w/ what mutations?

A
  • Hereditary = germline loss-of-function EXT1 or EXT2
  • Sporadic = ↓ expression of EXT1 or EXT2
  • These genes encode enzymes that synthesize heparin sulfate gylcosaminoglycans
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22
Q

What is the characteristic morphology and growth pattern of osteochondromas?

A
  • Are sessile or pedunculated w/ cap composed of benign hyaline cartilage varying in thickness
  • Cortex of newly formed stalk merges w/ cortex of the host bone, so that medullary cavity of the osteochondroma and bone from which it arises are in continuity
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23
Q

What is a complication of osteochondroma that is more often seen in those assoc. w/ multiple hereditary exostosis?

A

Progression to chondrosarcoma

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24
Q

What are chondromas and what are they known as if they arise in the medullary cavity vs. surface of bone?

A
  • Benign tumors of hyaline cartilage
  • In medullary cavity = enchondromas
  • Surface of bone = juxtacortical or subperiosteal chondromas
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25
Which age group are enchondromas most often seen in and which bones most often affected?
- **20-50 y/o** - Appear as **solitary metaphyseal lesions** of **tubular bones** of the **hands** and **feet**
26
Which 2 non-hereditary disorders are characterized by multiple enchondromas; characteristics of each?
- **Ollier syndrome** = multiple enchondromas - **Mafucci syndrome** = multiple enchondromas + **angiomas** --\> ↑ risk of chondro**sarcoma** and other malignancies
27
Which mutations have been identified in the chondrocytes of syndromic and solitary enchondromas?
**Heterozygous** mutations in the ***IDH1*** and ***IDH2*** genes
28
What is the size and characteristic morphology of enchondromas; how does this differ in the non-hereditary disorders Ollier and Maffucci syndrome?
- Usually **\<3cm** and are **gray-blue** and **translucent** - **Well-circumscribed** nodules of **hyaline cartilage** containing **benign chondrocytes** - Periphery may **ossify** and _center_ can **calcify** and **infarct** - **Ollier** and **Maffucci**: ↑ cellularity and atypia
29
Which malignancies are those with Mafucci Syndrome at increased risk of developing?
Chondro**sarcoma** + **ovarian carcinomas** and **brain gliomas**
30
Which age group is Chondrosarcoma most often seen in and it commonly arises in which bones?
- **Usually 40 y/o +** with **Men 2x \> female** - **Axial skeleton**: pelvis, shoulder, and ribs
31
A majority of chondrosarcomas arise de novo, but some arise from which 2 pre-existing tumors?
**Osteochondroma** or **enchondromas**
32
Chondrosarcomas arising in associated with syndromes such as multiple osteochondroma syndrome or those that are chondromatosis-related have which mutations?
- **Multiple osteochondroma syndrome**: mutations in ***EXT*** genes - **Chondromatosis-related**: ***IDH1*** and ***IDH2***
33
Sporadic chondrosarcomas may have what mutations?
- ***IDH1*** and ***IDH2*** mutations - **Silencing** of the ***CDKN2A*** tumor suppressor gene by DNA **methylation**
34
Which variant of chondrosarcoma is characterized as being composed of islands of well-differentiated hyaline cartilage surrounded by sheets of small round cells, which can mimic Ewing Sarcoma?
**Mesenchymal** chondrosarcoma
35
What is characteristically seen on radiographic imaging of chondrosarcoma?
Calcified matrix appears as foci of **flocculent densities**
36
What is the gross morphology of chondrosarcomas?
**Large bulky tumors** made up of **_nodules_** of **glistening gray-white**, _translucent_ cartilage but matrix is often gelatinous or myxoid
37
How are chondrosarcomas graded and what is unique about this grading?
- Assigned a **grade** from **1 to 3** - **_Direct_** correlation between **grade** and **behavior**
38
What is the behavior of chondrosarcomas and how may they metastasize and to where?
- Invade **locally**, _painful_ enlarging mass. - 70% of **grade 3** spread _hematogenously_, especially to **lungs**
39
What is the 5-year survival for grade 1 vs. grade 3 chondrosarcomas and how are they tx?
- **Grade 1** have **5-year** of **80-90%**; drops to **43%** for **grade 3** - **Tx** is by **wide surgical excision**
40
Ewing Sarcoma is a malignant bone tumor characterized by what?
Primitive **round cells** _without_ obvious differentiation
41
Ewing sarcoma is most often seen in which age group and has a predilection for which ethnicity?
- **80%** arise in pt's **\<20 y/o** with slightly more **males** affected - **Striking** predilection for **_whites_**, while **blacks/asians** _rarely_ affected
42
Where in bones does Ewing Sarcoma arise and which bones are most often affected?
- Arise in the **_diaphysis_** of **long tubular bones**; in the **medullary cavity** - Especially the **femur** and **flat bones** of the **pelvis**
43
How does Ewing Sarcoma typically present?
- **Painful** enlargin mass; frequently **tender, warm**, and **swollen** - Some have **systemic findings** that _mimic_ **infection** --\> including fever, ↑ ESR, anemia, and leukocytosis!
44
Plain radiographs of Ewing Sarcoma will show what; what is characteristic of the periosteal rxn of these tumors?
- **Destructive lytic tumor** w/ permeative margins that **extends** into surrounding soft tissues - Produces layers of reactive bone deposited in an **_onion-skin_** like fashion
45
Which translocation and fusion gene product is characteristic of Ewing Sarcoma?
**t(11;22)** --\> ***EWS-FL11*** gene
46
What does the presence of Homer-Wright rosettes in Ewing Sarcomas indicate?
A **greater degree** of **neuroectodermal differentiation**
47
What is the treatment and 5-year survival with Ewing Sarcomas?
- Tx w/ **neoadjuvant chemotherapy** followed by **surgical excision** with or without **radiation** - **5-year survival** of **75%** and **long-term** cure in **50%**
48
What is an important prognostic finding associated with tx of Ewing Sarcoma?
Amount of **_chemotherapy-induced necrosis_**
49
Which bone tumor composed of multinucleated osteoclast-type giant cells is benign, but locally aggressive?
**Giant Cell Tumor**
50
The neoplastic cells of Giant Cell Tumors express high levels of what?
**RANKL** --\> promoting proliferation and differentiation of osteo**clasts**
51
Where do Giant Cell Tumors most often arise?
- **Epiphyses**, may _extend_ into **metaphysis** - **Majority** around **knee** (**distal femur** and **prox. tibia**)
52
Why are giant cell tumors so highly destructive?
↑ **RANKL** from neoplastic cells with _**loss** of **feedback**_ btw osteo**blasts** and osteo**clasts** that normally **regulates** process of **bone remodeling**
53
What is the treatment, recurrence rate and prognosis for Giant Cell Tumors?
- Tx with **curettage** ---\> **40-60%** will **recur locally** - **4%** will **metastasize** to lung, may **regress** and **seldom fatal**
54
Aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) frequenlty arises in which bones?
- **Metaphysis** of **long bones** - **Posterior** elements of **vertebral bodies**
55
Signs and sx's of Aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC)?
- **Most common** = pain + swelling - If involves vertebrae, can **compress nerves** --\> **neurologic sx's**
56
How do aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) appear radiographically?
- **Eccentric**, _expansile lesion_ w/ **well-defined** margins - Most being **completely lytic**, often w/ **thin shell** of **reactive bone** at the **periphery**
57
CT and MRI of aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) may demonstrate what?
**Internal septa** and _characteristic_ **fluid-fluid levels**
58
The spindle cells of aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) frequently demonstrate which mutations?
**Cr. 17p13 _rearrangement_** ---\> **USP6 overexpression**
59
Unusually dense calcified matrix called "blue bone" is seen in some cases of what bone tumor?
Aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC)
60
Morphology of aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC)?
- **Multiple** _blood_-filled **cystic** spaces separatd by **thin, tan-white septa** - **Septa** are composed of **plump, uniform fibroblasts**, multinucleated osteo**lcast**-like **giant cells**, and _reactive_ **woven bone**
61
What are fibrous cortical defects (aka metaphyseal fibrous defects); where and in whom do they arise; defining characteristics?
- **_Extemely common_** arising in **30-50%** of _children_ **\>2 y/o** - Arise **eccentrically** in **metaphysis** of **distal femur** and **prox. tibia** - Almost **1/2** are **_bilateral**_ or _**multiple_**
62
How does fibrous cortical defect differ from nonossifying fibroma?
- **Fibrous cortical defects**: typically **small**, about **0.5cm** in diameter - **Nonossifying fibroma**: larger, up to **5-6cm** in size; usually not detected until **adolescence** or **adulthood**
63
What is the characteristic morphology of the fibroblasts and macrophages seen in both fibrous cortical defect and nonossifying fibroma; what other finding is commonly present?
- Cytologically _bland_ fibroblasts arranged in **storiform (pin-wheel) pattern\*\*\*** - Macrophages may take form of **clustered cells** w/ **foamy cytoplasm** or **multinucleated giant cells** - **Hemosiderin** is **_commonly_** present
64
What are the characteristic findings on radiograph of fibrous cortical defects and nonossifying fibromas?
**Eccentric lobulated** radiolucency surrounded by **thin rim** of **sclerosis**
65
What is the typical behavior and prognosis of fibrous cortical defects?
- Most have **_limited_** growth potential and undergo **spontaneous** **resolution** within several years - Few progressively enlarge --\> **nonossifying fibroma** may present w/ **pathologic fracture** or require biopy and curettage to exclude other tumor types
66
What is fibrous dysplasia and what has it been likened to?
- **Benign** tumor likened to **localized developmental arrest** - **_ALL_** components of **normal bone present**, but they **_do not_** differentiate into **mature structures**
67
Which 2 syndromes are associated with fibrous dysplasia and what is seen in each?
- **Mazabraund syndrome**: fibrous dysplasia (usually **polyostotic**) + **soft tissue myxomas** - **McCune-Albright disease**: _unilateral_ bone lesions w/ **café-au-lait skin pigmentations** + **endocrine** abnormalities; esp. **_precocious puberty_**
68
Fibrous dysplasia is due to mutations in what; what other pathology is this gene mutated in?
- **Somatic gain-of-function** mutation during development in ***GNAS1*** - Leads to constitutively active **GS-protein** - This gene is also mutated in **_pituitary adenomas_**
69
Characteristic morphology of fibrous dysplasia includes what?
**Curvilinear shapes** of the **trabeculae** of **woven bone** _mimic_ **Chinese characters** and bone _lacks_ prominent osteoblastic **rimming**
70
Monostotic fibrous dysplasia most often occur when and affects which bone; presenting sx's?
- **Early adolescence** and **_equally_** in **boys** and **girls**; typically **asymptomatic** - The **femur, tibia, ribs, jawbones**, **calvarium**, and **humerus** = **most commonly** affected
71
Monostotic fibrous dysplasia is seen on radiographic imaging as what?
**Ground glass** appearance and **well-defined** margins
72
Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia appears when, affects which bones, and produces what problems?
- Slightly **earlier** than the _monostotic_ form - **Femur \> skull \> tibia \> humerus \> ribs \> fibula \> radius \> ulna \> mandible \> vertebrae** - Propensity to involve **shoudler** and **pelvic girdles** --\> _severe_, progressive disease w/ _crippling deformities_ and _fractures_
73
What is a rare complication of polyostotic fibrous dysplasia?
**Malignant** transformation ---\> **sarcoma**
74
Which cancers in adult most frequently metastasize to the bone?
**Prostate** + **breast** + **kidney** + **lung**
75
Which cancers in children most frequently metastasize to the bone?
**Neuroblastoma** + **Wilms tumor** + **Osteosarcoma** + **Ewing sarcoma** + **Rhabdomyosarcoma**
76
Skeletal metastases are typically multifocal, but carcinomas from which 2 sites may present with solitary lesions?
**Kidney** and **thyroid** carcinomas
77
Metastases from which site produces a blastic (bone forming) pattern?
**Prostatic adenocarcinoma**