Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Bone and Soft Tissue Tumors

Bone and Soft Tissue Tumors

Bone and Soft Tissue Tumors

On this page

Bone Tumors: Basics & Benign - Gentle Giants

  • Approach: Age, location (epiphysis, metaphysis, diaphysis), margins (Lodwick: geographic IA/IB = benign; IC/moth-eaten/permeative = aggressive), matrix (osteoid, chondroid, fibrous), periosteal reaction (solid = benign; lamellated, sunburst, Codman = aggressive).
  • Common Benign Tumors:
    • Osteochondroma: Most common. Metaphyseal, cartilage-capped exostosis.
    • Giant Cell Tumor (GCT): Epiphyseal, lytic, "soap bubble". Locally aggressive.
    • Enchondroma: Medullary cartilage lesion. Hands/feet.
    • Fibrous Dysplasia: Ground-glass matrix.
    • Non-Ossifying Fibroma (NOF): Eccentric, lytic, sclerotic rim.
    • Aneurysmal Bone Cyst (ABC): Expansile, fluid-fluid levels. Giant Cell Tumor X-ray and Diagram

⭐ Osteochondroma is the most common benign bone tumor, typically presenting as a painless mass in adolescents.

Malignant Bone Tumors: Part 1 - Bad to the Bone

  • Osteosarcoma (OS)
    • Most common primary bone malignancy (excl. myeloma). Pain, swelling.
    • Age: Peak 10-20 yrs; also >65 yrs (secondary: Paget's, radiation).
    • Site: Metaphysis (distal femur, prox. tibia/humerus).
    • X-ray: Sunburst, Codman's triangle, cloud-like osteoid. Osteosarcoma X-ray: Codman's triangle and sunburst pattern
  • Ewing Sarcoma (ES)
    • Aggressive small round blue cell tumor; 2nd common in children.
    • Age: Peak 10-20 yrs.
    • Site: Diaphysis (long bones like femur), flat bones (pelvis).
    • X-ray: Onion-skin periostitis, moth-eaten destruction, large soft tissue mass.
    • Genetics: t(11;22) EWS-FLI1. 📌 "EWING t(11;22)"

⭐ Ewing Sarcoma often presents with systemic symptoms (fever, weight loss, ↑ESR), mimicking osteomyelitis.

Malignant Bone Tumors: Part 2 & Staging - More Meanies & Mapping

  • Chondrosarcoma:
    • Malignant cartilage. Age: >40 yrs.
    • Sites: Pelvis, femur, ribs.
    • X-ray: "Rings & arcs", popcorn calcification.
    • Chondrosarcoma X-ray with rings and arcs calcification
  • Multiple Myeloma (MM):
    • Commonest primary bone malignancy. Age: >50 yrs.
    • X-ray: "Punched-out" lytic lesions, vertebra plana.
    • 📌 CRAB: HyperCalcemia, Renal failure, Anemia, Bone lesions.
    • Multiple Myeloma Skull X-ray with Punched-Out Lesions
  • Adamantinoma:
    • Rare, low-grade. Site: Tibial diaphysis.
    • X-ray: "Soap bubble" appearance.
  • Staging: Enneking system (Grade, Site, Metastasis) guides therapy.

Key Malignant Bone Tumors Comparison:

FeatureOsteosarcomaEwing's SarcomaChondrosarcoma
Peak Age10-20 yrs10-20 yrs>40 yrs
SiteMetaphysis (knee)Diaphysis (long bones)Pelvis, prox. femur
X-raySunburst, Codman's $\triangle$Onion skin, lyticRings & arcs calc.

Soft Tissue Tumors & Mimics - Beyond the Bone

  • Soft Tissue Tumors (Key Examples):
    • Lipoma: Benign. Pure fat signal (T1/T2 hyper, fat-sats). Thin, few septa.
    • Liposarcoma: Malignant. Thick septa (>2 mm), nodular non-fatty areas, enhancement.
      • Well-differentiated: Often large, deep-seated.
      • Myxoid Liposarcoma: T2 hyperintense (myxoid stroma), "pseudocapsule", characteristic enhancement.
    • Synovial Sarcoma: Juxta-articular, young adults (15-40 yrs), calcification (~30%), "triple sign".
    • MPNST (Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor): NF1 association. Spindle cell tumor.
  • Common Tumor Mimics (Bone & Soft Tissue):
    • Non-Ossifying Fibroma (NOF): Eccentric, cortically-based lucency, sclerotic rim, "bubbly". Self-resolves.
    • Fibrous Dysplasia: "Ground-glass" matrix, expansile.
    • Myositis Ossificans: Zonal ossification, peripheral maturation. Early phase can mimic sarcoma.
    • Hematoma: Signal varies with age. No true enhancement of collection.
    • Abscess: Rim-enhancing collection, surrounding inflammation.

⭐ A key differentiator for liposarcoma vs. lipoma on MRI is the presence of thick septa (>2 mm), nodular or globular non-adipose components, and enhancement of these non-fatty areas.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Osteochondroma: Most common benign bone tumor.
  • Multiple Myeloma: Most common primary malignant bone tumor overall.
  • Osteosarcoma: Most common non-hematopoietic primary malignant bone tumor; metaphyseal, Codman's triangle, sunburst spiculation.
  • Ewing's Sarcoma: Diaphyseal, t(11;22), onion-peel reaction, small round blue cell tumor.
  • Giant Cell Tumor (GCT): Epiphyseal in skeletally mature patients, soap bubble appearance.
  • MRI is crucial for soft tissue sarcoma staging; Liposarcoma is most common in adults.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE