Dr James Wittig, MD Orthopedic Oncologist
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Bone Tumors
Periosteal Chondroma

James C. Wittig, MD
Sarcoma Surgeon
Orthopedic Oncologist


GENERAL INFORMATION

Benign neoplasm
Composed of mature hyaline cartilage
Arises from surface of bone from inner layer of periosteum
Erodes the outer table of the cortex
Does not grossly extend into medullary cavity
Also known as juxtacortical chondroma
More cellular than an enchondroma


CLINICAL PRESENTATION

Signs/Symptoms:
     Incidental radiographic findings
     Possible symptomatic mass
          Mildly painful
          Long duration of symptoms
          Mechanical symptoms

Prevalence:
     Very uncommon
          Accounts for ~0.66% of bone tumors
          3 times as common as juxtacortical chondrosarcoma
      2 to 1 male predilection

Age:
     All ages; usually <30 years
     Most commonly in second or third decades of life

Sites:
     Almost all in appendicular skeleton
          Proximal humerus-Most common
          Femur, tibia, phalanges are common sites
          Pelvis, ribs, vertebrae less common
    Occasionally multiple lesions occur
    Difficult to differentiate from periosteal chondrosarcoma (periosteal chondrosarcomas are usually
    greater than 6cm and periosteal chondromas are usually less than 6 cm)


RADIOGRAPHIC PRESENTATION

 

2/3 of periosteal chondromas involve metaphysis
     Remainder arise on diaphysis
Long bone lesions
     Size: 2-3 cm in size, up to 6 cm
     Over 6cm is worrisome for periosteal chondrosarcoma
Short tubular bones
      Size: Few mm to 3 cm in size,
      usually between 1 and 2 cm
Eccentric, longitudinally oriented periosteal mass
      Smooth, concave, often sclerotic contour
      Subtle underlying cortical erosion
      Outer Shell of Reactive Periosteum (Egg Shell Rim of Calcification around external surface)
Calcifications in a "Ring and Arc" manner and/or stippled calcifications
2/3 have distinct, well-defined peripheral borders
High intensity T2W MRI

CT Scan: Periosteal Chondroma




X-ray: Distal Femur Periosteal Chondroma


GROSS PATHOLOGY



Well circumscribed
Appears to be embedded in underlying cortical bone
Typically covered by a thin shell of reactive, often ossified periosteum
Medullary cavity not grossly invaded
Cross-section
      Blue-gray to white
      Translucent hyaline cartilage
           Often formed as lobules
     Calcification occasionally noticeable
           Yellow-white, gritty foci


MICROSCOPIC PATHOLOGY



Lobulated, obviously hyaline cartilage tumor
     Cartilaginous lobules separated by fibrous connective tissue or well-formed lamellar bone
           Calcium deposition occasionally present
     Necrosis absent
Innermost margin of lesion usually demarcated by rim of lamellar bone
Considerable interlesional variation in cellularity and pleomorphism
      Many consist of normocellular benign hyaline cartilage
      Binucleated chondrocytes are invariably present
      May be more cellular than an enchondroma with myxoid change of matrix
About 2/3 of tumors display
      Nuclear enlargement
      Hypercellularity with hyperchromasia
      Or myxoid change of the matrix

Microscopic Pathology: Periosteal Chondroma


BIOLOGICAL BEHAVIOR

No metastasis
No malignant change
Exceedingly rare recurrence
Non aggressive


TREATMENT & PROGNOSIS

Marginal excision without removal of surrounding tissue
     Occasional rare recurrence
En bloc excision
     Invariable curative


 

 
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