Histo: Neoplastic Bone Disease Flashcards
Which part of the body is most commonly affected by neoplastic bone disease?
Around the knee joint
Outline some presenting features of neoplastic bone disease.
- Pain
- Swelling
- Deformity
- Fracture
How are bone tumours diagnosed
X-ray
Biopsy
What type of biopsy is often used for diagnosing neoplastic bone disease?
- Needle biopsy using a Jamshidi needle under CT or US guidance
- Open biopsy for sclerotic or inaccessible lesions
List some tumour-like conditions of the bone.
- Fibrous dysplasia
- Metaphyseal fibrous cortical defect/non-ossifying fibroma
- Reparative giant cell granuloma
- Ossifying fibroma
- Simple bone cyst
What is fibrous dysplasia? Which age does it affect? What bone does it affect?
- Condition in which fibrous tissue replaces normal bone tissue
- Can occur in any bone but ribs and proximal femur is most common
- Tends to affect adolescents
Which eponymous syndrome is characterised by polyostotic fibrous dysplasia?
McCune Albright Syndrome: polyostotic fibrous dysplasia + endocrine problems + rough border café-au-lait spots
Which mutation causes fibrous dysplasia?
GNAS mutation Chr 20 q13 (mutation in a G-protein)
Describe the histological appearance of fibrous dysplasia.
The marrow is replaced by fibrous stroma with rounded trabecular bone (‘Chinese letters’)
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Describe the deformity seen on X-ray of fibrous dysplasia of the femoral head. What other lesion might you see?
Shepherd’s crook deformity
Soap bubble appearance of lytic lesions
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List three types of cartilaginous benign bone tumour.
- Osteochondroma
- Enchondroma
- Chondroblastoma
List three types of bone-forming benign bone tumour.
- Osteoid osteoma
- Osteoma
- Osteoblastoma
What are osteochondromas and which bones tend to be affected?
- A benign overgrowth of cartilage and bone that tends to happen at the ends of long bones
- Most common site is distal end of femur
- They mimic normal tubular bone as they have a cartilaginous surface overlying normal trabecular bone
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What is an enchondroma and which bones tend to be affected? What may an XR show?
- A cartilaginous proliferation within the bone
- Most tend to be found in the hands and can cause pathological fractures
- X-ray may show popcorn calcification
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What are two macroscopic features of benign bone tumours?
- Well demarcated
- May erode through the cortex of bone but does not burst through the cartilaginous surface
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What are giant cell tumours? Where do they tend to be found and what is their histological appearance?
- Benign tumour of the bone characterised by the presence of lots of osteoclast giant cells
- They tend to be found at the ends of long bones (epiphysis)
- It has a lytic appearance on X-ray
- Histology shows many osteoclasts on a background of spindle/ovoid cells
- Borderline malignancy - locally aggressive, can metastasise
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What is the most common type of malignant bone tumour?
Metastases
Which cancers in adults tend to spread to the bone?
- Breast
- Prostate
- Lung
- Kidney
- Thyroid
Which cancers in children tend to spread to the bone?
- Neuroblastoma
- Wilm’s tumour
- Osteosarcoma
- Ewing’s sarcoma
- Rhabdomyosarcoma
List three types of malignant primary bone tumour. Which is the most common?
- Osteosarcoma (most common)
- Chondrosarcoma
- Ewing’s sarcoma/PNET
What is an osteosarcoma, what age group is it most common in, and where does it tend to affect?
- Malignant bone-forming tumour of the bone that mainly occurs at the ends of long bones
- Tends to occur at age 10-30 years (incidence peaks in adolescence)
- 60% affect the knee
Describe the X-ray appearance of osteosarcoma
- Usually metaphyseal
- Lytic
- Permeative
- Elevated periosteum (Codman’s triangle)
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Describe the histological appearance of osteosarcoma.
- Lots of malignant osteoblast cells with or without bone and cartilage formation
NOTE: this can be stained for using ALP
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How can osteosarcoma be classified?
- Site within the bone (intramedullary, intracortical, surface)
- Degree of differentiation (high, intermediate, or low grade)
- Multicentricity
- Primary or secondary
What is a chondrosarcoma? Which age group does it affect? What bones does it affect?
- Malignant cartilage-producing tumour
- Tends to occur in patients aged > 40 years
- Affects axial skeleton, proximal femur and proximal tibia
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Describe the X-ray appearance of chondroscarcoma.
Lytic with fluffy calcification
Describe the histology of chondrosarcoma
Malignant chondrocytes +/- chondroid matrix
List the histological subtypes of chondrosarcoma.
- Conventional (myxoid or hyaline)
- Clear cell (low grade)
- Dedifferentiated (high grade)
- Mesenchymal
NOTE: myxoid = composed of clear, mucoid substance
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What is an Ewing’s sarcoma? What ages does it predominantly affect? What bones does it affect?
- Highly malignant tumour arising from neuroectodermal cells (small round cell tumour)
- Typically occurs in people < 20 years old
- Mainly affect diaphysis and metaphysis of long bones, pelvis
Describe the X-ray appearance of Ewing’s sarcoma.
- Onion skinning of the periosteum
- Lytic with or without sclerosis
Describe the histological appearance of Ewing’s sarcoma.
Sheets of small round cells
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Which genetic abnormality is associated with Ewing’s sarcoma?
Chromosomal translocation 11;22 (EWSR1/FLI1) (q24:q12)
Describe the prognosis of osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, and Ewing’s sarcoma
Osteosarcoma: 60% 5 year survival
Chondrosarcoma: 70% 5 year survival
Ewing’s: 75% 5 year survival
Define soft tissue tumour.
Mesenchymal proliferations which occur in the extra-skeletal, non-epithelial tissues of the body - excluding meninges and lymphoreticular system
Where do soft tissue tumours occur and which age group do they predominantly affect?
Anywhere - majority occur in large muscles of extremeites, chest wall, mediastinum, retroperitoneum
Predominantly affect >55 years
List three types of soft tissue tumour.
- Liposarcoma
- Spindle cell sarcoma
- Pleomorphic sarcoma
List some special diagnostic techniques used to diagnose soft tissue tumours.
- Immunohistochemistry
- Electron microscopy
- Cytogenetic
- FISH
- RT-PCR
List some bad prognostic factors for soft tissue tumours.
- > 5 cm size
- Depth involving deep fascia
- High grade
- Involved excision margin
- Vascular invasion
- Ploidy (aneuploid/hyperdiploid)
- High proliferation index
- Absent tumour suppression genes
- Present tumour promotor genes
Which conditions have these following X-ray features:
- soap bubble lytic lesions
- shepherd’s crook
- popcorn calcifications
- Codman’s triangle
- lytic with fluffy calcifications
- periosteal onion-skinning
- fibrous dysplasia, giant cell tumour of bone
- fibrous dysplasia
- enchondroma
- osteosarcoma
- chondrosarcoma
- Ewing’s sarcoma