Bone Tumor Basics - The Bony Blueprint
- Definition: Abnormal cell proliferation in bone.
- Classification:
- Origin: Primary (from bone/cartilage cells) vs. Secondary (metastatic).
- Behavior: Benign vs. Malignant.
- Histogenesis: Bone-forming (e.g., Osteosarcoma), Cartilage-forming (e.g., Chondrosarcoma), Fibrous, Round cell (e.g., Ewing sarcoma), Giant cell tumors.
- Benign Signs: Well-defined, sclerotic rim, intact cortex, no soft tissue extension.
- Malignant Signs: Ill-defined, lytic/permeative pattern, cortical destruction, soft tissue mass, aggressive periosteal reactions (e.g., Codman triangle, sunburst).

⭐ Metastases are the most common malignant tumors found in bone overall in adults.
Benign Bone Buddies - Mostly Harmless
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Osteochondroma (Exostosis):
- Most common benign. Age: < 20 yrs.
- Site: Metaphysis (e.g., knee). Cartilage-capped bony spur.
- Radiology: Points away from joint.

- ⭐ > Malignant change to chondrosarcoma rare (< 1%), ↑ risk in multiple hereditary exostoses.
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Osteoid Osteoma:
- Age: < 25 yrs (males).
- Site: Cortex of long bones (femur, tibia).
- Clinical: Nocturnal pain, relieved by NSAIDs.
- Radiology: Small (< 1.5 cm) radiolucent nidus, dense sclerosis.
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Giant Cell Tumor (GCT):
- Age: 20-40 yrs.
- Site: Epiphysis (e.g., knee). Locally aggressive.
- Radiology: "Soap bubble" lytic lesion.
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Enchondroma:
- Age: 20-50 yrs.
- Site: Medulla of small bones (hands/feet).
- Radiology: Lytic, "rings & arcs" calcification.
- 📌 Ollier disease (multiple), Maffucci syndrome (with hemangiomas, ↑ malignancy risk).
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Fibrous Dysplasia:
- Developmental.
- Radiology: "Ground-glass" opacity.
- Histology: "Chinese letter" trabeculae (woven bone, no osteoblastic rimming).
Malignant Monsters - Serious Bone Breakers
- Osteosarcoma: Most common primary malignant bone tumor (excluding myeloma).
- Age: 10-20 yrs (peak); also >65 yrs.
- Site: Metaphysis of long bones (knee, proximal humerus).
- X-ray: Codman triangle, sunburst appearance. Histo: Malignant osteoid production.
- Genetics: Associated with RB1, TP53 (Li-Fraumeni syndrome).
- Chondrosarcoma: Malignant cartilage-forming tumor.
- Age: 40-60 yrs.
- Site: Axial skeleton (pelvis, ribs), proximal femur/humerus.
- X-ray: Endosteal scalloping, ring-and-arc or "popcorn" calcification.
- Ewing Sarcoma: Aggressive small round blue cell tumor.
- Age: 10-15 yrs.
- Site: Diaphysis of long bones, pelvis, scapula.
- X-ray: "Onion-skin" periosteal reaction, lytic lesions, moth-eaten appearance.
- Genetics: t(11;22) EWS-FLI1 fusion. 📌 (Ewing Flew to 1122 street).
- Multiple Myeloma (Plasma Cell Myeloma): Most common primary malignant tumor of bone overall.
- Age: >50 yrs (peak 65-70 yrs).
- Site: Vertebrae, ribs, skull, pelvis (areas with hematopoietic marrow).
- X-ray: "Punched-out" lytic lesions. Lab: M-spike (serum/urine protein electrophoresis).
⭐ Ewing Sarcoma is characterized by the t(11;22)(q24;q12) chromosomal translocation, resulting in the EWS-FLI1 fusion gene, crucial for diagnosis and a potential therapeutic target. This translocation is found in ~85% of cases.
Tumor Mimics & Workup - Looks Can Deceive
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Common Tumor Mimics:
- Infection (Osteomyelitis, Brodie's abscess)
- Fracture Callus
- Fibrous Dysplasia
- Myositis Ossificans
- Brown Tumor (Hyperparathyroidism)
- Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (Eosinophilic Granuloma)
- Paget's Disease (lytic/sclerotic phases)
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Diagnostic Pathway:
⭐ Biopsy tract must be planned for en-bloc resection with the tumor during definitive surgery to prevent local recurrence.
- Staging: Enneking (Benign S1-S3; Malignant G, T, M), AJCC TNM for sarcomas.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Osteosarcoma: Most common primary malignant bone tumor, typically around the knee; Codman triangle, sunburst pattern.
- Ewing Sarcoma: Small round blue cell tumor; t(11;22) translocation; onion-skin periosteal reaction.
- Giant Cell Tumor: Epiphyseal location in adults; soap-bubble appearance on X-ray; locally aggressive.
- Osteochondroma: Most common benign bone tumor; cartilage-capped bony projection (exostosis).
- Chondrosarcoma: Malignant cartilage-forming tumor in older adults; commonly affects pelvis, ribs, femur.
- Metastases: Most common overall malignant tumors OF bone (secondary to other cancers like breast, lung, prostate).
- Fibrous Dysplasia: Benign lesion; ground-glass appearance; associated with McCune-Albright syndrome (polyostotic form).
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