Osteoid osteoma

Osteoid osteoma
  • It is a benign bone forming tumor which is usually smaller than 1cm in greatest dimensions and had limited growth potential
  • Incidence-13% of all benign bone tumors
  • Clinical features:
    • Age – Usually seen in adolescents and young adults
    • Sex – Male predominance with male to female ratio of 2 or 3 to 1
    • Symptom –
      • Progressive pain which is typically worse at night is characteristic symptom of patient
      • Pain is immediately relieved by NSAIDS
      • Pain is thought to be due to the presence of nerve fibres in the nidus and production of prostaglandins by the nidus which can be suppressed by NSAIDS
      • Tenderness and swelling may present if the lesion is located superficially.
  • Sites:
    • Common sites are long bones particularly tibia and femur but any portion of skeleton may be involved
    • In long bone, diaphysis or metaphysis are involved by lesion
    • Osteoid osteoma rarely presents with multicentric involvement
  • Radiographic findings:
    • Lesions involve medulla, cortex, subcortical bone or even bone surface
    • In long bones-lesion is located in cortex with nidus appearing as oval lucency which is well demarcated and may have variable meneralization
    • Central lucency may show calcification with lucent halo
    • Associated sclerosis in cortical bone usually appears as fusiform thickness of cortex with thickest area on the nidus
    • If the lesion is in spongy bone or in the intracapscular location, there may not be any associated sclerosis
    • CT is sensitive for the detection of nidus in osteoid osteoma. In the sites like femoral neck and spine, nidus can be detected by CT scan
  • Gross findings:
    • When surgeon chisels thick cortical bone, red granular area is exposed which is the nidus
    • Entire sclerotic bone need not be removed but if the nidus is removed sclerotic bone is remodled over months or years
    • Gross appearance of nidus depends upon site of involvement
    • If the lesion is in medullary cavity-it appears as well demarcated red marble without associated sclerosis
    • If the lesion is in cortical bone or subcortical,  reactive sclerosis is extensive with nidus appearing as well demarcated red granular area
    • Nidus can be separated by scalpel from the sclerotic bone
  • Microscopic findings:
    • Nidus shows interlacing network of bony trabecular and osteoid with variable mineralisation
    • Anastomosing trabeculae are usually thin
    • In the nidus central part is more mineralised than peripheral part
    • Bony trabeculae are rimmed by single layer of osteoblasts which are small and polygonal
    • Intertrabecular space contains spindle shaped fibroblasts and proliferating capillaries
    • Thickened bony trabeculae may show cement lines
    • Surrounding sclerotic bone is sharply demarcated from the nidus
    • If the lesion is within capsule of joint, lymphocytes and plasma cells show  infiltration
  • Differential diagnosis:
    • Osteoblastoma
      •  Difficult to distinguish as morphological features overlap
      • Osteoid osteoma has limited growth potemtial with size less than 1cm where as osteoblastomas are always larger than 2cms
    • Osterosarcoma- Distinguished by morphological features. Osteoid osteoma is well demarcated lesion whereas Osteosarcoma is infiltrative lesion with Pleomorphic cells
    • Stress fractures may simulated osteoid osteoma with reactive new bone formation however leaks the rounded nidus seen in osteoid osteoma
  • Treatment and  prognosis:
    • Complete surgical removal of nidus
    • Medical management by NSAIDS is preferred if  surgical treatment is contraindicated
    • CT guided percutaneous resection of the nidus can be perfomed
    • Incomplete excision leads to reccurrence.