Parosteal osteosarcoma
Updates to Article Attributes
Parosteal osteosarcoma is a subtype of osteosarcoma and arises from the outer layer of the periosteum.
Epidemiology
It is the most common type of juxtacortical or surface osteosarcoma and accounts for ~5% of all osteosarcomas. It typically presents in early adulthood and middle age with a peak incidence in the third decade. It affects females slightly more than males 9.
Clinical presentation
Patients usually present with a painless, slowly enlarging mass 9.
Pathology
They are usually located at the metaphysis (80-90%), most commonly at the posterior aspect of the distal femur (60%), followed by either end of the tibia, and then the proximal humerus.
They are composed of a dense osteoid component attached to the outer cortex over a narrow zone. Parosteal osteosarcoma originates from the outer fibrous layer of periosteum. It exhibits extensive bone matrix and minimal fibroblastic cellular atypia, and as such is considered to be a low-grade tumour.
Radiographic features
- large lobulated exophytic, 'cauliflower-like' mass with central dense ossification adjacent to the bone
- string sign: thin radiolucent line separating the tumour from the cortex, seen in 30% of cases
- tumour stalk: grows within the tumour in late stages and obliterates the radiolucent cleavage plane
- +/- soft tissue mass
- cortical thickening without aggressive periosteal reaction is often seen
- tumour extension into the medullary cavity is frequently seen
MRI
It exhibits predominantly low signal intensity both on T1 and T2 weighted imaging. High signal intensity on T2 is suggestive of a high-grade tumour.
Treatment and prognosis
Parosteal osteosarcomas are usually low-grade lesions are usually treated with surgical resection and no neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiation. As they are frequently metaphyseal in location, large parosteal osteosarcomas or those with deep medullary invasion may require limb salvage, including joint replacement.
Parosteal osteosarcomas have an excellent prognosis (80-95% long-term survival).
Differential diagnosis
On imaging consider
- cortical desmoid: avulsive injury of the posterior femoral cortex
-
myositis ossificans: the ossification pattern of parosteal OS is the radiographic inverse of that seen in myositis ossificans, with the densest ossification in the centre of the lesion and the least
radio-opaqueradiopaque bone at the periphery (eggshell pattern); there is also often a history of trauma, progressive decrease in size or constant size and significant oedema in early stages on MRI. - sessile osteochondroma: parosteal OS lacks corticomedullary continuity between the tumour and the underlying medullary canal.
- juxtacortical chondrosarcoma
- high-grade surface osteosarcoma
- parosteal lipoma: radiolucent mass adjacent to the cortical surface on plain film and on cross-sectional imaging will usually show a definite fat component 2
-<li>tumour stalk: grows within tumour in late stages and obliterates the radiolucent cleavage plane</li>- +<li>tumour stalk: grows within the tumour in late stages and obliterates the radiolucent cleavage plane</li>
-<a href="/articles/myositis-ossificans-1">myositis ossificans</a>: the ossification pattern of parosteal OS is the radiographic inverse of that seen in myositis ossificans, with the densest ossification in the centre of the lesion and the least radio-opaque bone at the periphery (eggshell pattern); there is also often a history of trauma, progressive decrease in size or constant size and significant oedema in early stages on MRI.</li>- +<a href="/articles/myositis-ossificans-1">myositis ossificans</a>: the ossification pattern of parosteal OS is the radiographic inverse of that seen in myositis ossificans, with the densest ossification in the centre of the lesion and the least radiopaque bone at the periphery (eggshell pattern); there is also often a history of trauma, progressive decrease in size or constant size and significant oedema in early stages on MRI.</li>