Chondroblastoma of the thoracic spine: a rare location. Case report with radiologic-pathologic correlation.
Aïna VenkatasamyM P ChenardG MassardJ-P SteibG BierryPublished in: Skeletal radiology (2016)
Chondroblastoma is a rare benign cartilage neoplasm that arises from the appendicular skeleton in the vast majority of the cases (80%). Chondroblastoma of the spine is an even more rare condition (30 cases reported), and vertebral chondroblastomas, unlike chondroblastomas of the extremities, present with the appearance of an aggressive tumor on CT and MR imaging and occur at least a decade later. Even though vertebral chondroblastomas are very uncommon tumors, they should nonetheless be included in the differential diagnosis when encountered with an aggressive vertebral mass, and a histological confirmation should be performed. We present a case of chondroblastoma of the thoracic spine of a 27-year-old female for which detailed radiologic-pathologic correlation was obtained.
Keyphrases
- bone mineral density
- case report
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- spinal cord
- contrast enhanced
- computed tomography
- locally advanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- postmenopausal women
- spinal cord injury
- body composition
- squamous cell carcinoma
- magnetic resonance
- positron emission tomography
- low grade
- rectal cancer
- extracellular matrix