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PRIMARY MALIGNANT BONE TUMORS 1. MULTIPLE MYELOMA ( M/C) 2. OSTEOSARCOMA 3. CHONDROSARCOMA 4. EWING’S SARCOMA 5. CHORDOMA Others MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA ANGIOSARCOMA FIBROSARCOMA

Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

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Page 1: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

PRIMARY MALIGNANT BONE TUMORS 1. MULTIPLE MYELOMA ( M/C)

2. OSTEOSARCOMA

3. CHONDROSARCOMA

4. EWING’S SARCOMA

5. CHORDOMA

Others

MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA

ANGIOSARCOMA

FIBROSARCOMA

Page 2: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 3: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Radiographic features that may help differentiate benign from malignant lesions

Page 4: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Age in years

Tumour

<1 Neuroblastoma

1-10 Ewing sarcoma-tubular bones

10-30 Osteosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma-flat bones

30-40 Fibrosarcoma,malignant fibrous histiocytoma,lymphoma,Malignant GCT

>40 Chondrosarcoma,chordoma,multiple myeloma

AGE OF ONSET

Page 5: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

SITE OF ORIGIN

EPIPHYSIS MALIGNANT GCT

METAPHYSIS OSTEOSARCOMA

CHONDROSARCOMA

FIBROSARCOMA

DIAPHYSIS EWING’S SARCOMAMULTIPLA MYELOMA

ADAMANTINOMA

MFH

Page 6: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

OSTEOSARCOMA

MALIGNANT BONE FORMING TUMOUR

PRIMARY SECONDARY

INTAOSSEOUS-TELANGIECTATIC,SMALL CELL,LOW GRADE

SURFACE- PAROSTEAL ( common surface OS )

- PERIOSTEAL

MULTICENTRIC

Page 7: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

PRESENTATION

-PAIN

-PALPABLE MASS

-PATHOLOGICAL #

AGE 10-30 YRS

SITE METAPHYSIS OF LONG BONES

-DISTAL FEMUR-PROXIMAL TIBIA

-OTHERS HUMERUS,RIBS,ILEUM,JAW BONES

LUNG - Cannonball mets, subpleural nodule > cavitate > rupture

>Spontaneous pneumothorax

Skeletal mets – Skip lesions

Page 8: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Types of matrix: Osteoblastic

solid sclerotic mass,parosteal osteosarcoma

wisps of tumor-bone formation, osteosarcoma of the sacrum

Page 9: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Radiographic features

Plain film

•Medullary and cortical bone destruction

•Wide zone of transition

• Permeative or moth-eaten appearance

•Aggressive periosteal reaction

• Sunburst

• Codman triangle

•Soft-tissue mass

•Tumour matrix ossification/calcification

• ill-defined "fluffy" or "cloud-like"

Page 10: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

“Sunburst” periosteal formation

Codman’s Triangle

Page 11: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 12: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 13: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 14: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Central Osteosarcoma

Expansile lytic destruction

homogeneous sclerosis 50%

Osteolytic 25% mixed 25%

Aggressive features such as cortical or

medullary bone destruction

Page 15: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 16: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Multicentric Osteosarcoma

Early presentation 5-10 yrs

Course rapid, fatal

Early pulmonary mets

8yrs old female with pain in LL

since 6 months

Lab- Elevated Alkaline

Phosphatase

Page 17: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 18: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 19: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Parosteal Osteosarcoma

•Origin-surface of the bone.

•Grows -surrounding soft tissues, may also infiltrate bone marrow.

M/C on the posterior side of the distal femur.

Slow growing, 30-50 yrs

•Ossification in a parosteal osteosaroma -in the center than at the periphery.

•D/D myositis ossificans present close to the cortical bone, but maturation develops from the periphery to the center

Page 20: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Radiographic features

•large lobulated exophitic, 'cauliflower-like'

Mass with central dense ossification

•string sign thin radiolcent line separating the

tumour from cortex, Cleavage plane.

•+/- soft tissue mass.

•cortical thickening without aggressive periosteal

reaction is often seen.

•tumour extension into medullary canal,freqently

Page 21: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

string sign

Page 22: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

•A well-defined and homogeneous sclerotic mass with a broad base to the underlying diaphysis of the fibula.

Page 23: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

•Radiograph.

•Homogeneous ossified mass adjacent to the cortical bone of the distal femur

•MRISagittal T1-weighted MR very low signal intensity due to the ossified matrix and the cortical bone which is unimpaired.

Page 24: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Periosteal osteosarcoma

Broad-based surface soft-tissue mass

Extrinsic erosion of thickened underlying

diaphyseal cortex

M/c Femur, Tibia

Perpendicular periosteal reaction extending into

the Soft-tissue component:

Periosteal reaction common,

Sunburst

Codman triangle

Page 25: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Periosteal OS

Lytic in appearance,

cortical erosion

periosteal reaction.

Page 26: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

PERIOSTEAL

Page 27: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 28: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Telangiectatic Osteosarcoma

Uncommon

telangiectatic component 90% .

Large blood filled spaces

separated by thin bony septations.

Asymmetric expansion

Lysis of bone

Aggressive growth pattern

Cortical destruction

Minimal peripheral sclerosis

CT, MR – Fluid fluid levels.

Page 29: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

presence of nodular septal

thickening, osteoid matrix

mineralization in a soft-tissue

mass, and an aggressive

growth pattern can aid in

distinguishing telangiectatic

OS from ABC.

Page 30: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 31: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

CHONDROSARCOMA

Malignant cartilaginous tumour

> 40 YRS

SITES—LONG BONES,PELVIS,RIBS,SPINE,STERNUM, skull base)

TYPES

PRIMARY INTRAMEDULLARY

JUXTACORTICAL

CLEAR CELL,MYXOID,EXTRASKELETAL

SECONDARY

osteochondroma

solitary osteochondroma

hereditary multiple exostoses)enchondroma

solitary enchondroma Ollier disease Maffucci syndrome

Page 32: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

C/F

PAIN

PATHOLOGICAL #

PALPABLE MASS

Hyperglycaemia paraneoplastic phenomenon.

H/P

multilobulated (due to hyaline cartilage nodules)

central high water content and peripheral

enchondral ossification.

This accounts not only for the high T2 MRI

rings and arcs calcification or popcorn calcification

Page 33: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Plain film

•lytic (50%)

•intralesional calcification

•rings and arcs / popcorn calcification)

•endosteal scalloping: affecting more than two thirds of the

cortical thickness (c.f. less than 2/3 in enchondromas)

•moth eaten /permeative appearance and periosteal

reaction distinguishing between enchondroma and

chondrosarcoma

Page 34: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

•Elderly patient

•Location in long bones

•Size > 5 cm

•Uptake on bone scan

•Endosteal scalloping on MRI

•Cortical involvement

•Early enhancement on dynamic contrast enhanced series

DIFF WITH ENCHONDROMA

Page 35: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 36: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Types of matrix: chondroid matrix

Enchondromachondroid matrix

CHONDRSARCOMA

Page 37: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 38: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 39: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Proximal tibia diaphysis.subtle calcifications,

Endostealscalloping hallmark of chondrosarcoma.

MR better defines the extension of the lesion.

endostealscalloping.

Page 40: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

CHONDROSARCOMA ARISING FROM OSTEOCHONDROMA

calcified mass arising from the proximal fibula.high uptake on the bone scan

Page 41: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Axial T2 WI

SECONDARY CHONDROSARCOMA

Page 42: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

rings-and-arcs calcifications

The differential diagnosis is enchondroma or low grade chondrosarcoma.

The CT shows the calcifications with subtle endosteal thinning of the cortical bone

Final diagnosis: low grade chondrosarcoma.

Page 43: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 44: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

EWING SARCOMASmall round blue cell tumour

Second most common malignant bone tumor in children (after osteosarcoma)

medullary cavity,

usually of long bones in the lower extremities

Femur most common

pelvis

upper limb

spine and ribs sacrococcygeal region

SYMPTOMS

Age 5-15 yrslocalized pain and swelling

Additional symptoms may include

Fever

Weight loss

Anemia

Leukocytosis

Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate

Page 45: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Poorly marginated,

Lytic

destructive lesion

Permiative / moth eaten (mottled)

Soft tissue mass or infiltration is common

Soft tissue mass may produce saucerization (scalloped depression

in cortex)

Periosteal reaction

Lamellated - onion-skinning due to successive layers of periosteal

development

Sunburst or spiculated - hair-on-end appearance when new bone

is laid down perpendicular to cortex along Sharpey’s fibers

Codman’s triangle - formed between elevated periosteum

with central destruction of cortex

Page 46: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 47: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 48: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

16 yr old white male with pain in his

left upper arm.

Mild swelling and tenderness

Pain progressively getting

worse for ~ 3 months

Recent onset of mild fever

Page 49: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Biopsy material highly cellular,

infiltrative neoplasm -sheets of tightly

packed, round cells with very scant

cytoplasm ("round blue cell tumor").

Page 50: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

osteosarco

ma

Ewing’s Infection

Page 51: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Embryonic remnants of the primitive notochord

earliest fetal axial skeleton, extending from the Rathke's pouch to

the coccyx)

locally aggressive

1. sacro-coccygeal: 30-50% 2-3

2. spheno-occipital: 30-35%

3. vertebral body: 15-30%

(30-60 years)

spheno-occipital -20-40 years

sacrococcygeal -age group (peak 40-60 years).

Clinical Findings

Low back pain

Constipation or fecal incontinence

Rectal bleeding

Sciatica from nerve root compression

Frequency, urgency, straining on micturition

CHORDOMA

Page 52: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Imaging Findings

•Large presacral mass (>10cm) with displacement of the rectum

and/or bladder

Solid tumor with cystic areas in 50%

Destroys multiple sacral and coccygeal segments

Sequestered bone fragments are common

Sclerotic rim in 50%

May have amorphous calcifications, especially peripherally

May cross the sacroiliac joint

Mild-moderate enhancement

Page 53: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 54: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

SPHENO-OCCIPITAL

The clival region 2nd most

common

Typically the mass

projects in the mid-line

posteriorly indenting the

pons.

This characteristic

appearance has been

termed the 'thumb sign".

Page 55: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Multiple myeloma

Four main patterns1. disseminated form: multiple defined lesions: axial

skeleton

2. disseminated form: diffuse skeletal osteopenia

3. solitary plasmacytoma: -vertebral body/pelvis

4. osteosclerosing myeloma

Page 56: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Clinical presentation

60-70 YRS

•bone pain:

• initially intermittent, but becomes constant

• worse with activity/weight bearing, and thus is

worse during the day

•anaemia:

• typically normochromic/normocytic

•renal failure/proteinuria:

•pathological fracture:

• vertebral compression fracture

• long bone fracture (e.g. proximal femur)

•amyloidosis

•recurrent infection: e.g. pneumonia due to leukopaenia

Page 57: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Lab findings :

•reverse albumin/globulin ratio

•monoclonal gammopathy (IgA and/or IgG

peak)

•proteinuria: Bence Jones proteins in urine

•hypercalcaemia

•vertebrae (most common)

•ribs

•skull

•shoulder girdle

•pelvis

•long bones

SITES

Page 58: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Radiographic features

Plain film

skeletal survey

diagnosis of multiple myeloma,

in assessing response,

potential complications (e.g. pathological fracture).

1. lateral skull

2. frontal chest film

3. cervico-thoraco-lumbar spine

4. shoulders

5. pelvis

6. femurs

Page 59: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

1.numerous, well-circumscribed lytic bone lesions

(more common):

punched out lucencies –

pepperpot skull or raindrop skull

2.endosteal scalloping

Page 60: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Generalized osteopaenia (less common):

often associated with

vertebral compression fractures

Wrinkled vertebra of Myeloma

vertebra plana

Less involvement of Pedicles

‘ PEDICLE sign’ of Multiple Myeloma

Osteoblastc lesions- Ivory vertebra

Page 62: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 63: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

numerous lytic lesions without reactive

sclerosis

"soap-bubbly" appearance in the ischia.

lytic lesions in proximal femora.

Page 64: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

SOLITARY BONE PLASMACYTOMA (SBP)

•Thoracic vertebrae-M/C

•Lumbar, sacral, and cervical vertebrae.

• Rib, sternum, clavicle, or scapula

C/F

painful mass, pathologic fracture, or root

or spinal cord compression syndrome.

Diagnostic criteria•single area of destruction due to clonal plasma cells

•bone marrow plasma cell infiltration <5% of all nucleated

cells

•absence of osteolytic bone lesions or other tissue

involvement absence of anemia, hypercalcemia or renal

impairment

•low or absent serum / urine monoclonal protein

•preserved levels of uninvolved immunoglobulins

Page 65: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Radiographic features

Plain film

Solitary expansile lytic lesion

thinning and destruction of cortex

bubbly/trabeculated appearance.

Characteristic absence of sclerotic reaction

.

CT

Expansile lytic lesion with thinned out cortex,

characteristic 'mini-brain' appearance solitary vertebral

lesions.-

Page 66: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

Expansile soft tissue lesion involving

only the L1 vertebra.

Prominent residual thickened

trabeculae "MINI BRAIN" appearance.

Page 67: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology

ADAMANTINOMA OF LONG BONES

2ND TO 3RD DECADES

LOCALLY AGGRESSIVE

DULL PAIN OF GRADUAL ONSET.

TIBIAL DIAPHYSIS (ESPECIALLY ANTERIOR CORTEX)

MULTI-LOCULAR OR SLIGHTLY EXPANSILE OSTEOLYTIC

LESION

SOLITARY FOCUS OR MULTICENTRIC LUCENCIES

CORTICAL LUCENCIES COMBINED WITH SCLEROSIS.

LACK OF PERIOSTEAL REACTION

Page 68: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology
Page 69: Malignant bone Tumors,Radiology