Dr James Wittig, MD Orthopedic Oncologist
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Bone Tumors
Chondroblastoma

James C. Wittig, MD
Sarcoma Surgeon
Orthopedic Oncologist



GENERAL INFORMATION

Benign neoplasm of immature cartilage cell (chondroblast) proliferation
      Cells resemble chondrocytes/chondroblasts
      Marked predilection for arising from the epiphysis
Usually occurs in skeletally immature patients
<1% of osseous neoplasms
High propensity for local recurrence


Codman Tumor (old historical name for chondroblastoma)

     Cartilage Containing Giant Cell Tumor
          Kolodney 1972
     Calcifying Giant Cell Tumor
          Ewing 1928

Clinical Data

Rare; 1-2% all bone tumors
Male predilection (2:1)
Children and young adults; 90% 5-25 yrs. old

Benign Aggressive Tumor with High Propensity for Local Recurrence
Very rare cases that metastasize to the lungs

Location:
Almost all cases arise from the epiphysis of the bone
Epiphysis only 40% of cases
Epiphysis and metaphysis 55% of cases
Metaphysis only 4%


Epiphyseal Lesions
Differential Diagnosis of Lesions that tend to involve the epiphysis:

Chondroblastoma
Clear cell chondrosarcoma
Giant Cell Tumor (GCT)
Subchondral Cyst/Intraosseous Ganglion
Infection
Eosinophilic Granuloma (LCH)
Osteoid Osteoma
Osteoblastoma
Mets, myeloma, lymphoma


CLINICAL PRESENTATION


Signs/Symptoms
: Mild Pain lasting from months to several years
33% of patients have a joint effusion and swelling with limitations in range of motion
Often confused with a sports injury

Sex Predilection: Male > Female 1.4:1

Age: Range 3 – 72 years
95% of cases occur between the ages 5 and 25
Most cases occur in adolescents between 10 and 20 years of age

Sites: Predilection for distal femur, proximal tibia & humerus
98% located in epiphysis, 30% in knee area
May also occur in calcaneus, talus and temporal bone

Most Common Sites:
Proximal Femur 23%
Distal Femur 20%
Head and Neck 16%
Trochanter 7%
Proximal Tibia 17%
Proximal Humerus 17%
Hands and Feet 10%


RADIOGRAPHIC PRESENTATION

Presents as a highly defined/well circumscribed geographic oval/round lytic defect
Surrounded by rim of sclerotic bone
Usually in epiphyseal region
Lesion ranges from 3 cm to 6 cm diameter
Usually radiolucent
May have fine trabeculae and irregular calcifications
Calcifications are often better detected with a CT scan but are not uniformly present
Lesions may expand the bone and new periosteal bone may form
Bony end plate, cortex, bone contour are unaffected

Plain X-rays:
Geographic lytic lesion
IA/IB margin of sclerosis
Usually Eccentric more often than Central in the bone
Rarely expansile (rarely penetrates the cortex)
Calcified chondroid matrix 30%-50% of cases
Often better detected with a CT Scan
Periosteal Reaction 30-50% of cases
Usually occurs in Adjacent Diaphysis/Metaphysis since epiphysis is intraarticular and not surrounded by periosteum

MRI:
Geographic, well circumscribed lesion in the epiphysis
Intermediate Signal on T1
High signal on T2 mixed with low signal areas  (low signal areas proposed to be secondary to lysosomal content of highly cellular areas)
Fluid/Fluid levels demonstrated in tumors that have undergone ABC change (aneurysmal bone cyst change)
Extensive Surrounding edema is common
Joint effusion in 30-50% of cases

CT scan:
Most useful for detecting subtle mineralization that is not apparent on X-rays
Useful for identifying intact periosteum around any expansile soft tissue component that appears as a surrounding thin reactive shell of bone/mineralization (Egg Shell Rim of Calcification). This helps place the tumor in a benign category.
Can help evaluate bony quality, extent of bone and cortical destruction and whether the subchondral plate of bone adjacent to the joint cartilage has been destroyed or is intact.

Bone Scan: Chondroblastomas demonstrate intense increased uptake on a bone scan
 


Geographic Lesion
Epiphyseal Lesion
Skeletally Immature
Surrounding Sclerotic Rim
No Mineralization Detected on Radiograph


Plain X-Ray:
Chondroblastoma of Proximal Humerus


CT: Proximal Humerus Chondroblastoma
Subtle calcifications detected on CT that were not detected on plain X-ray
(Left arrow)  Expansile Lesion:  Periosteum Intact around Soft Tissue Component
(Right arrow)  Subtle Calcification in Tumor


Calcifications
Geographic
Epiphyseal
Expansile
Benign Aggressive Tumor

 

CT Scan of Proximal Humerus Chondroblastoma

 

Low Signal Areas

 

 

 

Border

                                                  

                                                             

 

 

Edema

 

 

MRI T2 Weighted Image: Lesion with Primarily High Signal with Low Signal in Many Areas and Extensive Surrounding Edema Chondroblastomas are often associated with extensive surrounding edema 

 

MRI T2 Weighted Axial Image Extensive Peritumoral Edema


Bone Scan:
Increased Uptake in Chondroblastoma of Right Proximal Humerus


 

 

Chondroblastoma Proximal
Tibia

Epiphyseal

Geographic

Subtle Surrounding Sclerosis 
     
 
                             

Plain X-ray of Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia 
 



Plain X-ray: 
Proximal Tibia Chondroblastoma




Lateral Xray:
Chondroblastoma from Tibial Eminence: Expansile with Peripheral Rim of Calcification (Periosteum Intact)





CT Scan:
Expansile Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia Epiphysis with Intact Periosteum




CT Scan:
Expansile Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia: Subtle Calcifications within Tumor




CT Scan: Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia
Geographic Lesion of Proximal Tibia

 




MRI T1 Weighted Image
Proximal Tibia Chondroblastoma
Intermediate Signal on T1 Weighted Image


 

Chondroblastomas are primarily high signal on T2 with low signal areas in tumor

There is also extensive Peritumoral Edema and a knee Joint effusion

The tumor is well circumscribed

The periosteum is intact around the expansile soft tissue component

MRI T2 Weighted Image
Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia

 



Bone Scan:
Increased Uptake in Proximal Tibia Chondroblastoma


 

Geographic Tumor Epiphysis

                                               

 

Subtle Mineralization Tumor

Plain X-Ray and CT Scan:
Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia


Plain X-Ray:
Chondroblastoma of Proximal Humerus



MRI:
Proximal Humerus Chondroblastoma



Plain X-Ray:
Chondroblastoma of Toe Proximal Phalanx


Plain X-Ray:
Chondroblastoma of Talus


 Plain X-Ray:
Chondroblastoma of Talus

 


CT Scan:
Chondroblastoma of Talus



CT Scan:
Chondroblastoma of Talus



MRI T1:
Chondroblastoma of Talus




CT Scan:
Distal Femur Chondroblastoma

Geographic Tumor

Epiphyseal Location

Subtle Calcifications        

MRI T1 and T2 Weighted Images
Chondroblastoma of Distal Femur

 


GROSS PATHOLOGY

Grossly variable appearance
Grey/yellow/brown and gritty if has interspersed calcifications
               Interspersed red areas from hemorrhagic necrosis
May be blue-grey areas from the chondroid matrix
Rim of sclerotic bone is visible in totally resected specimens
Lesion  may be fully cystic with solid foci of tumor tissue at periphery
May undergo aneurysmal bone cyst change (ABC change)


Specimen:
Curettings





MICROSCOPIC PATHOLOGY

Variable appearance depending on percentage of cells, necrosis, cartilage matrix formation and ABC change
Hypercellular Tumor; Minimal Pleomorphism; Occasional Mitoses but no Abnormal Mitoses; No Atypia
Chondroid matrix in up to 15% of tumor
ABC component 5-15% of tumors
The tumor is composed of chondroblasts that have a distinct, thick cell membrane. The thick cell membrane gives it a "Chicken Wire Fence Appearance" especially when the cell membranes are calcified. "Chicken Wire Calcifications"
Cytoplasm of chondroblasts is plump, clear, eosinophilic
Nucleus is centrally or eccentrically round/oval with indentations
            Coffee Bean Shaped Nucleus
            Nucleus exhibits clefts, grooves, invaginations
Cells are closely packed together
            Osteoclast-like giant cells are interspersed
Calcification is an important diagnostic sign and deposits itself along cell membranes. This gives a pattern referred to as a "Chicken Wire pattern of Calcification" because the appearance is similar to a chicken wire fence.
Chondroblasts stain positive for S-100


Microscopic Pathology:
Chondroblastoma

Tightly Packed Cells
Dark, Thick Cell Membrane
Bean Shaped Nuclei
Abundant Cytoplasm
No Peomorphism
No Atypical Mitotic Figures

         

 

Chondroblast: Prominent Indented Nucleus
Plump Eosinophilic Cytoplasm
Thick Cell Membrane
Uniform Appearance of Cells

Imagine the cells present without the nuclei:  The thickened cell membranes would give a chicken wire fence appearance

 

 

 

 

Giant cells can be present


Chicken Wire Pattern of Calcification
The calcium is deposited along the cell membrane and perimeter of the cells in a linear manner


Von Kossa Stain for Calcium


S100 Protein Immunostain is Positive in Chondroblastoma
Cartilage stains positive for S-100


BIOLOGICAL BEHAVIOR


Chondroblastomas are benign aggressive tumors. They grow aggressively and destroy the bone. Chondroblastomas can destroy the cortex and grow into the soft tissues. They are contained by the periosteum (this differs from a malignant tumor that destroys the cortex)
There are extremely rare cases where chondroblastomas metastasize to the lungs and may not appear for 30 years
           Metastases may remain stable or may progress and cause death
Recurrences may occur in the bone or adjacent soft tissue
Rare cases of multifocal chondroblastomas have been documented
           Synchronous involvement of several sites
Secondary aneurysmal bone cyst frequently correlated with chondroblastoma
Chondroblastomas have been reported to transform into fibrosarcoma or osteosarcoma years after being treated with radiation.


TREATMENT

Intralesional curettage resection and bone grafting is the most common treatment. Cement and internal fixation may also be used to fill the defect after removal for selected patients.
          High risk of local recurrence after curettage alone
          Local adjuvants such as cryosurgery (liquid nitrogen application) may be considered to
          decrease the risk of local recurrence.
          Local recurrence results in further bony destruction
          Rarely chondroblastomas that have grown out of control have required amputations for
          treatment because they have completely destroyed the bone and/or adjacent joint.
          In patients who are skeletally immature (still growing) there is always a risk of growth plate
          failure from the chondroblastoma since it usually grows adjacent to the growth plate and may
          damage it.
CT Guided Radiofrequency Ablation (Minimally Invasive Approach)
          May be indicated for selected small tumors
           Mostly performed in specialized centers



Treatment of a Chondroblastoma of Proximal Humerus with Intralesional Curettage Resection, Cryosurgery and Bone Grafting




Specimen: Curettings




Tumor Cavity: Periosteum Intact and Rotator Cuff Preserved





Tumor Cavity after Curettage




Cryosurgery of Tumor Cavity




Bone Grafting and Closure




Intralesional Curettage Resection, Cryosurgery and Cement/Internal Fixation for Chondroblastoma of Proximal Tibia




Surgery: Curettage Resection of a Proximal Tibia Chondroblastoma

         

Cryosurgery




Reinforcement of ACL Insertion

           
Cementing and Bone Graft




Bone Graft to Close Cortical Window





PROGNOSIS

Chondroblastomas are benign aggressive tumors that grow and destroy the bone and joint as it grows.
Most patients are cured with the first surgery
There is a significant risk of local recurrence (up to 30% with an intralesional curettage alone without an additional local adjuvant such as cryosurgery). Microscopic tumor cells can grow back after the tumor is removed.
My preferred method is to perform curettage and cryosurgery whenever feasible in appropriate cases in order to help eradicate microscopic disease and decrease the risk of local recurrence (decrease the risk of the tumor coming back in the bone after surgery)
Radiofrequency has been successful in the treatment of very selected small tumors.
               This is a minimally invasive approach
Rare cases of pulmonary metastases have been reported.
               Pulmonary metastases may be stable or may progress and cause death
               Pulmonary metastases have extremely rarely been reported to develop 30 years after initial
               treatment.

 

 

 
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