Bone Sarcomas: General Features & Classification - Bone's Bad Bunch
- Primary malignant bone tumors; aggressive with high metastatic potential (lungs common).
- Symptoms: Persistent pain (esp. night pain), swelling, palpable mass, pathological fractures.
- Staging: X-ray (initial), MRI (local extent), CT chest (mets), Biopsy (definitive diagnosis).

| Feature | Osteosarcoma | Ewing's Sarcoma | Chondrosarcoma |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peak Age (yrs) | 10-20 (2nd peak >50) | 5-15 | 40-70 |
| Common Site | Metaphysis (knee, prox. humerus) | Diaphysis (long bones, pelvis) | Pelvis, prox. femur, ribs |
| X-ray | Sunburst, Codman's Δ, new bone | Onion-peel, lytic, moth-eaten | Lytic; popcorn/ring & arc calcification |
| Histology | Malignant osteoid production | Small round blue cells; t(11;22) | Malignant cartilage; no osteoid |
Osteosarcoma - Teenage Bone Bane
- Most common primary malignant bone tumor. Bimodal age: 10-20 yrs (peak), >65 yrs (secondary).
- Sites: Metaphysis of long bones (distal femur > proximal tibia > proximal humerus). 📌 "Knee is keen".
- Genetics: Rb, TP53 (Li-Fraumeni). Associated: Paget's disease, prior radiation.
- Clinical: Pain, swelling, palpable mass, pathological fracture, ↓ range of motion.
- X-ray: 📌 "Sun, Cod, Periosteum"
- Sunburst appearance (tumor spicules).
- Codman's triangle (periosteal elevation).
- Periosteal reaction. Lytic/sclerotic/mixed. "Cumulus cloud" (tumor bone).

- Histology: Malignant osteoid production by tumor cells. Pleomorphic spindle cells. High-grade.
- Treatment: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (MAP: Methotrexate, Adriamycin, Cisplatin), surgical resection, adjuvant chemotherapy.
⭐ Serum Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) often elevated; prognostic marker.
Ewing's Sarcoma - Small Round Blue Battle
-
Epidemiology:
- Peak age: 10-20 years; 2nd most common primary malignant bone tumor in children.
- Sites: Diaphysis of long bones (femur, tibia), pelvis, ribs.
-
Clinical Presentation:
- Localized pain, swelling. Systemic: fever, weight loss, ↑ESR (mimics infection).
-
X-ray Findings:
- Permeative lytic ("moth-eaten") lesion in diaphysis.
- Periosteal reaction: 📌 'Onion-skin' (lamellated), Codman's triangle.
-
Histology:
- Sheets of small, round, blue cells; scant cytoplasm.
- Homer-Wright rosettes; PAS positive (glycogen).
-
Genetics:
- Translocation: $t(11;22)(q24;q12)$ → EWS-FLI1 fusion protein.
-
Treatment:
- Multimodal: Chemotherapy, surgery, radiotherapy. Highly radiosensitive.
⭐ Ewing's sarcoma is a neuroectodermal tumor, part of the Ewing Sarcoma Family of Tumors (ESFTs), including PNET.
Chondrosarcoma & Other Bone Sarcomas - Cartilage Calamity Crew
-
Chondrosarcoma: Malignant cartilage-forming tumor.
- Age: >40 yrs. Sites: Pelvis, prox. femur, ribs.
- Clinical: Slow growing; pain, path # (pathological fracture).
- Treatment: Surgical excision mainstay. 📌 Chondrosarcoma = Cartilage, Chemo/Radio-Resistant.
- X-ray: Endosteal scalloping, cortical changes, "popcorn"/"rings & arcs" calcification (cartilage matrix).

- Grading (Prognosis):
Grade Features 5-yr Survival 1 (Low) Low cellularity, rare mitoses ~90% 2 (Int) Mod. cellularity/atypia, mitoses ~70% 3 (High) High cellularity/atypia, many mitoses ~40%
⭐ Chondrosarcomas are notably resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy; complete surgical resection offers the best chance of cure.
-
Other Notable Bone Sarcomas:
- Adamantinoma: Rare, low-grade. Tibia (classic). X-ray: "Soap-bubble", eccentric, osteolytic.
- Chordoma: Slow, locally aggressive. Notochordal remnants. Sites: Sacrum (common), clivus, spine.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Osteosarcoma: Most common primary malignancy (excl. myeloma); metaphysis (knee region); Codman's triangle, sunburst pattern; ↑ALP.
- Ewing's Sarcoma: Diaphysis of long bones; small round blue cell tumor; t(11;22) translocation; onion-peel periostitis.
- Chondrosarcoma: Cartilaginous origin; affects adults >40 yrs; common in pelvis, proximal femur/humerus; popcorn calcification.
- Giant Cell Tumor (GCT): Locally aggressive; epiphysis of mature long bones (knee region); soap bubble appearance.
- Most common site of metastasis for bone sarcomas is lungs.
- Adamantinoma: Rare, low-grade malignancy; classically affects tibial diaphysis (mid-shaft).
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