Bone Tumors
Bone Tumors
Bone Tumors
A) Benign
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According to their evolution they can be:
1. Inactive (static or slow)(stage I)
They are sealed within a mature fibrous capsule or bone
cortical; they remain localized and do not cross the
compartment limit. Reactive area is minimal. Histology shows:
well-differentiated matrix, no hyper-chromatism, differentiated
cells, no anaplasia (modified cell components like nucleus), no
pleomorphysm (various altered shapes), clinically symptom-
less.
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C) Malignant tumors
Diagnosis
f) Rapid development
One of the most interesting (but also disturbing)
characteristic features of malignancy is rapid growth.
Growth speed of malignant tumors is considerably higher
than the one of normal cells, due to their hyperactive
behavior. The pointless growth and multiplication of such
tumor cells is consistently induced by their lack of contact
receptors, which in normal tissue wounds will inform cells
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of their neighbor presence and consequently prevent
overgrowth.
2. Radiological criteria
3. Lab tests
Classification
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Hystogen Benign Low malignancy High malignancy
esis
I. Fibrous 1. Histiocyte 1. Grade 1 and 2 fibro 1. Fibro
& fibroma sarcoma sarcoma (3rd
histiocyte 2. Benign fibrous 2. Malignant fibrous and 4th
histiocytoma histiocytoma (1st and degree)
3. Giant cell tumor 2nd degree)
4. Desmoid fibroma
2. Malignant
fibrous
histiocytoma
(3rd and 4th )
II. 1. Exostosis 1. Central 1. Central
Cartilage 2. Epiphyseal chondrosarcoma (1st chondrosarco
dysplasia and 2nd degree) ma (3rd
3. Chondroma 2. Peripheral degree)
4. Chondroblastom chondrosarcoma (1st 2. Peripheral
a and 2nd degree) chondrosarco
5. Chondromyxoid 3. Periosteal ma (3rd
fibroma chondrosarcoma (2nd degree)
degree) 3. Periosteal
4. Clear cell chondrosarco
chondrosarcoma ma (3rd
degree)
4. Mesenchyma
chondrosarco
ma
III. Bone 1. Osteoma 1. Cortical linked 1. Classic
2. Osteoid osteoma osteosarcoma osteosarcoma
3. Osteoblastoma 2. Periosteal 2. Hemorrhage
4. Fibrous dysplasia osteosarcoma osteosarcoma
5. Osteo-fibrous 3. Low malignancy 3. Small cell
dysplasia central osteosarcoma osteosarcoma
4. Osteosarcoma
tosis
IV. ----- ----- 1. Lymphoma
Marrow 2. Plasmocytom
mesenchy a
ma 3. Leukemia;
Hodgkin;
V. 1. Hemangioma 1. Hemangio- 1. Angiosarcom
Vascular 2. Lymphangioma epithelioma a
2. Hemangio- 2. Hemangio-
pericytoma pericytoma
VI. 1. Neurinoma -----
Nervous 2. Neurofibroma
VII. 1. Lipoma ----- Liposarcoma
Adipose
VIII. ----- Adamantinoma Malignant
Mixed mesenchynoma
IX. ----- Chordoma ------
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Notocorda
l
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This factor is important for assessing prognosis and
establishing a surgical strategy.
T1 - means intra-compartmental tumor or tumor inside the
original compartment;
T2 - means extra-compartmental tumor (beyond the origin
compartment);
The compartment notion involves a well-defined anatomical
space able to oppose tumor extension, such as: cartilage, joint
capsule, aponeurosis, periosteum.
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Stage IA IB II A II B III A III B
G grade G1 G1 G2 G2 G 1-2 G 1-2
T factor T1 T2 T1 T2 T1 T2
M factor Mo Mo Mo Mo M1 M1
Clinical Slow Slow Fast Fast ---- ----
evolution
scintigraph + + + + ---- ----
y beyond beyond X-ray
X-ray limit
limit
X-ray grade 1 2 3 3 2 3
Angiograph Light peri- Light Clear Clear peri- High reaction of
y tumoral peri- peri- tumoral vascular
vascular tumoral tumoral vascular lymph-
reaction vascular vascular reaction nodes
reaction reaction
MRI Unclear Extra- Unclear Extra- Presence of metastasis in
border, but compart border, compartmenta lung, bone, lymph-nodes,
inside mental but inside l origin or etc.
compartme origin or compart expansion
nt expansio ment
n
Treatment principles
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It is obvious that the treatment of tumors has to rely upon
several means of therapy, mostly applied simultaneously.
There is a complex approach involving surgery, radiotherapy
and chemical therapy.
1. Surgical approach
2. Radio-therapy
1. alkylant
2. anti-metabolic
3. alkaloid
4. anti-blastic antibiotic
Stage I A
Stage II A ( G2 T1 M0 )
Stage II B ( G2 T2 M0 )
Patient check-up
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The following chapter is dedicated to the brief description of
some of the most significant tumor types.
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Treatment is according to stage: common type will benefit
from total excision, local cauterisation with adequate agents
(phenol, alcohol) and cavity bone substitution (bone-graft,
mineral substitution or even cement). Extensive type requires
segmental resection. Spine, pelvis or sacrum localization may
require selective artery obstruction. Relapse should be
considered for amputation. There is some 10% relapse in usual
approach and practically none after large resection. Adequate
monitoring is needed within the first five years.
3. Fibrosarcoma (FS)
Chondrosarcoma (CS)
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Bone originating tumors
Osteoma
Osteoid osteoma
111. Osteoid
osteoma within
calcaneus
The x-ray
reveals the
ostheolysis characterized core of the tumor, called nidus,
enveloped in a condensation hallo. Vivid hyper-fixation is
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visible on scintigraphy, which can reveal otherwise invisible
formations. CT scan allows depiction of precise location pre-
operatively. There is also local osteoporosis triggered by pain
and local inflammation.
Histology shows a central core, made out of osteoid
tissue and charged with rich cell content (osteoblast,
osteoclast, fibroblast and capillary). Condensed bone clearly
envelops the tumor and there is a visible inflammatory reaction
in the synovia and surrounding soft tissues.
Differential diagnosis has to be done with solitary
(Brodie) abscess or chronic bone infection (osteomyelitis).
The osteoid osteoma will never disappear by itself. It
also doesn’t grow and it almost never turns malignant. If
correctly excised, relapse is seldom. Finding the accurate
location of the nidus is compulsory for adequate surgical
approach.
Osteosarcoma (OS)
Common (classic) OS
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- Ever increasing severe pain, that can get to excruciating
level, mostly nocturnal; it will precede tumor occurrence by
6-12 months;
- Progressive tumoral growth, covered by thinned,
inflammation flushed tegument displaying collateral
venous circulation;
- Increased local temperature, local muscular atrophy and
neighboring joint response;
- Increase of serum AP
(Alkaline Phosphatase);
- Decrease of general
condition and anemia (may witness
already spreading metastasis);
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proceeding can be given pre-operatively and clinical response
is evaluated 2 months after:
- pain cease or decrease;
- tumor decrease;
- decrease of AP (alkaline phosphatase);
- osseous maturation of the tumor (positive imaging);
- diminished vascular network of the tumor and its
neighboring tissues visible on arteriography;
- reduced hyper-fixation on scintigraphy;
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extra-compartmental), they will undergo this type of treatment,
with some exceptions:
- extension of tumor in the medullary channel and skip-
metastasis;
- neighboring joint invasion
- presence tumoral cell cluster within deep veins;
Prognosis depends on a number of factors:
- tumor extension;
- location (the more central on the body, the more lethal);
- tumor necrosis response under chemical therapy; 80%
of the patients with tumor necrosis exceeding 90% have the
chance of survival beyond the 5 year limit;
Ewing sarcoma
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It is a malignant tumor originating in undifferentiated
mesenchyma and there is still a debate over its true origin. It
accounts for 10% of the bone malignancies and affects mostly
males between 10 – 20 (exceptionally under 5 and beyond 25).
It will affect mostly long bones: 23% femur, 9% tibia, 19%
pelvis; 11% ribs and some 5% for scapula.
There are vivid clinical signs that characterize the tumor: pain,
tumor growth, fever 38˚ C, increased ESR rate and LDH rate;
X-ray image displays the typical aspect of onion. Histology
displays the aspect of non-differentiated tissue. It is extremely
invasive and highly metastatic.
Treatment includes chemical therapy, irradiation and surgery.
Surgery employs large resection or amputation, prepared by
proper chemical therapy and / or
radiation. Relapse is frequent and
resistant to radiation.
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