Chondrosarcoma pathophysiology

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1];Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Shivali Marketkar, M.B.B.S. [2]

Overview

Pathophysiology

Microscopic Pathology

In general chondrosarcomas are multilobulated (due to hyaline cartilage nodules) with central high water content and peripheral enchondral ossification. Each chondrosarcoma subtype has specific characteristics:

Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma

Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma is a malignant tumor with a characteristic biphasic pattern:

  • Poorly differentiated small round blue cells.
  • Islands of well-differentiated hyaline cartilage.
  • Can have a hemangiopericytomatous vascular pattern.
Islands of cartilage in a background of small blue cells
Chords of neoplastic cells surround mucin pools

Myxoid chondrosarcoma

  • Myxoid background.
  • small cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm.
Anastomizing chords of small neoplastic cells surround mucin pools
Chords of neoplastic cells surround mucin pools

Clear cell chondrosarcoma

  • Lobules of uniform to polymorphic densely-packed large cells.
  • Well defined pushing borders.
  • Clear to intensively acidophilic granular cytoplasm with vacuoles.
  • Central nuclei with occasional prominent nucleoli.
  • Low mitotic rate.
  • Clear cell areas lack production of hyaline chondroid matrix.
  • Areas with osteoclast-type giant cells mixed with small trabeculae of reactive bone.
  • May contain conventional low-grade chondrosarcoma.
  • May have secondary aneurysmal bone cyst changes.
High grade round cells with cytoplasmic clearing
The lesion also had areas of more conventional chondrosarcoma


Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma

  • Poorly differentiated (mesenchymal) malignancy.
  • Well-differentiated cartilaginous component.


Shown below is a micrograph of chondrosarcoma.(H&E stain)

Video

Below is a video of Extraskeletal Myxoid chondrosarcoma {{#ev:youtube|DxljkFd9xew}}

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