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20110922

Chondrosarcoma


Introduction
  • Malignant chondrogenic lesions can occur in two forms
    • primary chondrosarcoma
      • which includes
        • low-grade, high-grade, de-differenitated chondrosarcoma
        • clear cell chondrosarcoma 
        • mesenchymal chondrosarcoma 
    • secondary chondrosarcoma
      • arises from benign cartilage lesions including 
        • osteochondroma (<1% risk of malignant transfomation)
        • multiple hereditary exostosis (1-10% risk of malignant transfomation)
        • enchondromas (1% risk of malignant transfomation)
        • Ollier's disease (25-40% risk of malignant transfomation)
        • Marfucci's (100% risk of malignant transfomation)
  • Age & location
    • typically, chondrosarcomas are found in older patients (40-75 yrs)
    • there is a slight male predominance
    • most common locations include the pelvis, proximal femur, scapula 
    • tumor location is important for diagnosis as the same histology may be diagnosed as benign in the hand but malignant if located in the long bones
  • Grade
    • 85% of chondrosarcomas are grade 1 or 2
    • 15% of chondrosarcomas are grade 3 or dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma 
      • de-differentiated chondrosarcomas are high grade lesions which develop from low grade chondroid lesions and require more aggressive treatment including adjuvant chemotherapy
  • Prognosis
    • axial and proximal extemity lesions have a more aggressive course
    • histologic grade correlates with survival
      • Grade I: 90% survival
      • Grade II: 60-70% survival
      • Grade III: 30-50% survival
      • De-differentiated chondrosarcoma: 10% survival
    • increased telomerase activity in chondrosarcoma, as determined byreverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), has been shown to directly correlate with the rate of reccurence 
  • Primary Chondrosarcoma sub-types
    • Clear cell chondrosarcoma 
      • malignant immature cartilaginous tumor accounting for <2% of all chondrosarcomas
      • most common in 3rd and 4th decades of life
      • commonly presents with insidious onset of pain 
      • presents as an epiphyseal lesion and can be mistaken for low-grade chondroblastoma
      • locally destructive with potential to metastasize 
    • Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma
      • chondrosarcoma variant which presents with a biphasic pattern of neoplastic cartilage with associated neoplastic small round blue cell component
      • occurs in younger patients than typical chondrosarcomas
      • may occur at several discontinuous sites at presentation and can occur in the soft tissues
      • treatment includes neo-adjuvant chemotherapy followed by wide surgical resection
Symptoms
  • Presentation
    • pain is the most common symptom
    • may present with slowly growing mass or symptoms of bowel/bladder obstruction due to mass effect in the pelvis
    • 50% of de-differentiated chondrosarcomas present with a pathologic fracture
Imaging
  • Radiographs
    • lytic or blastic lesion with reactive thickening of the cortex 
      • low-grade chondrosarcomas have a similiar appearance to enchondromas with additional cortical thickening/expansion and endosteal erosion  
      • high-grade chondrosarcomas are less well defined on plain radiographs and frequently present with cortical destruction and a soft tissue mass
    • intra-lesional "popcorn" mineralization  may be seen
      • described as rings, arcs, and stipples of mineralization
    • de-differentiated chondrosarcomas radiographically show a lower grade chondroid lesion with superimposed highly destructive area consistentwith the high grade transformed dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma 
  • MRI or CT
    • helpful to determine cortical destruction, marrow involvement, and the soft tissue involvement 
  • Bone scan
    • is usually very hot in all grades of chondrosarcoma
Histology
  • Chondrosarcoma
    • needle biopsy is not indicated for cartilage tumors due to difficulties with diagnosis
      • it is often difficult to determine malignancy based on histology alone
    • chararcteristic histology
      • low-grade chondrosarcomas show few mitotic figures with a bland histologic appearance and associated enlarged chondrocytes with plump multinucleated lacunae 
      • high-grade chondrosarcomas have a hypercellular stroma consisting of characteristic "blue-balls" of a cartilage lesion which permeate the bone trabeculae 
    • enchondromas of hand, Ollier's disease, Maffucci's disease, periosteal chondromas, and chondrosarcoma may all have similar histology
  • De-differentiated chondrosarcomas
    • characterized by a bimorphic histology
      • low grade chondroid component
      • high grade spindle cell component (similiar histology to osteosarcoma, fibrosarcoma, MFH)
Treatment
  • Operative
    • intra-lesional curettage 
      • indications
        • Grade 1 lesions 
        • treatment of grade 1 lesions located in the pelvis or axial skeleton is controversial
          • many authors recommend wide excision of all chondrosarcomas (even grade 1) if located in the pelvis
    • wide surgical excision 
      • indications
        • grade 2 or 3 lesions
        • some say grade 1 lesions in pelvis
      • historically, there is no significant role for radiation or chemotherapy in typical intramedullary chondrosarcoma 
    • wide surgical excision combined with multi-agent chemotherapy 
      • indications
        • high-grade de-differentiated chondrosarcoma
        • mesencymal chondrosarcoma

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