Summary
Osteoblastoma is benign tumor which creates bone and osteoid. Lesions are commonly found on the dorsal aspect of the vertebrae or long bones.
Complete Information on this Tumor
Osteoblastoma is a solitary, benign bone-forming tumor that occurs in the spine and long bones of young adults. Osteoblastoma and osteoid osteoma are histologically very similar, yet these two tumors are very different in their presentation, localization, radiographic appearance, treatment, and potential for recurrence.
Osteoblastoma predominantly affects young adults. The peak age of occurrence is approximately age twenty, though the tumor may present as early as age ten to as late as age sixty.
Common symptoms are pain of long duration, swelling and tenderness. Tumors of the spine can cause scoliosis and neurological symptoms. The lesion may clinically present with myleopathic and/or radicular symptoms.
The classic microscopic finding of osteoblastoma is irregular spicules of mineralized bone and eosinophilic osteoid rimmed by osteoblasts. The vascular stroma is characterized by pleomorphic spindle cells. The tumor cells differentiate into osteoblasts which make varying amounts of osteoid and woven bone. Cartilage production is a very rare finding in an osteoblastoma and should raise the suspicion of osteosarcoma.
inconsistent pain vs.persistent, nocturnal pain
irregular tissue pattern vs. regular pattern
>2 cm vs. < 1 cm
Sporadic reports of malignant sarcomas arising in osteoblastoma have been published. In addition, multiple authors have described a subset of these tumors that behaves in a much more locally aggressive fashion. These tumors have been found to be larger and occur in slightly older individuals. Microscopically, these tumors may have a distinct appearance, including epithelioid features and larger osteoblasts with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and vesicular nuclei. These tumors have been variously termed "aggressive osteoblastoma" or "malignant osteoblastoma". The radiographic and pathologic features of these tumors overlap with osteosarcoma.
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