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Chondrogenic Bone Tumors: The Importance of Imaging Characteristics

Hannes Engel, Georg W. Herget, Hannah Füllgraf, Reto Sutter, Matthias Benndorf, Fabian Bamberg, Pia M. Jungmann

2020RöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Röntgenstrahlen und der bildgebenden Verfahren56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chondrogenic tumors are the most frequent primary bone tumors. Malignant chondrogenic tumors represent about one quarter of malignant bone tumors. Benign chondrogenic bone tumors are frequent incidental findings at imaging. Radiological parameters may be helpful for identification, characterization, and differential diagnosis. METHODS: Systematic PubMed literature research. Identification and review of studies analyzing and describing imaging characteristics of chondrogenic bone tumors. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The 2020 World Health Organization (WHO) classification system differentiates between benign, intermediate (locally aggressive or rarely metastasizing), and malignant chondrogenic tumors. On imaging, typical findings of differentiated chondrogenic tumors are lobulated patterns with a high signal on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ring- and arc-like calcifications on conventional radiography and computed tomography (CT). Depending on the entity, the prevalence of this chondrogenic pattern differs. While high grade tumors may be identified due to aggressive imaging patterns, the differentiation between benign and intermediate grade chondrogenic tumors is challenging, even in an interdisciplinary approach. KEY POINTS: · The WHO defines benign, intermediate, and malignant chondrogenic bone tumors. · Frequent benign tumors: osteochondroma and enchondroma; Frequent malignant tumor: conventional chondrosarcoma. · Differentiation between enchondroma versus low-grade chondrosarcoma is challenging for radiologists and pathologists. · Pain, deep scalloping, cortical destruction, bone expansion, soft tissue component: favor chondrosarcoma. · Potential malignant transformation of osteochondroma: progression after skeletal maturity, cartilage cap thickness (> 2 cm adult; > 3 cm child). · Potentially helpful advanced imaging methods: Dynamic MRI, texture analysis, FDG-PET/CT. CITATION FORMAT: · Engel H, Herget GW, Füllgraf H et al. Chondrogenic Bone Tumors: The Importance of Imaging Characteristics. Fortschr Röntgenstr 2021; 193: 262 - 274.

Topics & Concepts

EnchondromaChondrosarcomaOsteochondromaChondrogenesisMedicineMagnetic resonance imagingCartilageChondroblastomaRadiologyChondromaHyaline cartilageDifferential diagnosisMalignant transformationPathologyOsteoarthritisAnatomyArticular cartilageAlternative medicineBone Tumor Diagnosis and TreatmentsMusculoskeletal synovial abnormalities and treatmentsSarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment
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