| Literature DB >> 29609578 |
Federica Scotto di Carlo1,2, Giuseppina Divisato1, Maurizio Iacoangeli3, Teresa Esposito1,4, Fernando Gianfrancesco5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Giant Cell Tumour of Bone (GCT) is a locally aggressive primary bone tumour that usually occurs at the epiphyses of the long bones of the appendicular skeleton with a tendency to recurrence. Recurrent somatic H3F3A mutations have been described in 92% of GCT cases. GCTs involving the Clivus are extremely rare lesions and less than 15 cases are described in the literature. They represent a surgery challenge and are easily misdiagnosed. Our aim was to reveal if the genetic bases underlying Clival GCTs were the same of GCTs of long bones to improve the diagnosis and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Clivus; Diagnostic algorithm; Differential diagnosis; Giant cell tumour; H3F3A gene
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29609578 PMCID: PMC5880014 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-018-4291-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Case presentation. a Histology of the specimen excised in 2014 from patient 1, showing numerous multinucleated osteoclast-like giant cells scattered in a background of mononuclear cells (hematoxylin and eosin stain; 20× objective). b Haematoxylin and eosin staining of tumor biopsy of patient two. Smaller osteoclast-like giant cells are observable (20× objective)
Fig. 2MRI images. Sagittal, axial and coronal magnetic resonance images of patient 1, depicting the large and recurrent giant cell tumour originating from the clivus (indicated by the red arrow in the sagittal view), with a C1 vertebral infiltration
Fig. 3H3F3A mutation causes GCT of the clivus. a Sequence electropherograms of the PCR product of the H3F3A gene, showing the low mutational peak at position c.103 in patient 1 (left) and patient 2 (right). Asterisks denote the mutated base. b Representative electropherogram of patient 1 showing the allele specific sequencing of cloned DNA fragment and demonstrating the presence of p.Gly34Trp mutation in H3F3A. c Immunofluorescent visualization of the H3F3A mutation in the nuclei of mononuclear cells, while osteoclastic giant cells are negative and only react with TRAP antibody (20× objective, scale bar 100 μm). Note the higher number of neoplastic cells in Clival GCT of patient 1 (left) compared to patient 2 (right)
Fig. 4Clival GCT expresses Tenascin-C and high levels of RANKL. Tenascin-C reactivity in the extracellular matrix and RANKL-positive mononuclear cells in tumour biopsies of patient 1 (left) and patient 2 (right) are shown (20× objective, scale bar 100 μm)
Fig. 5Diagrammatic representation of the human skull in sagittal section, identifying the main bones and cavity. The location of lesions in 104 cases of skull GCTs is indicated by arrows. Adapted from Anatomy of the Human Body [77]
Histology-based diagnostic algorithm of the main lesions arising within the clivus
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| Gross examination | Microscopic appearance | S100 | EMA | Keratin | Vimentin | Brachyury | CD3 | CD20 | CD45 | |
| Chordoma | Soft, haemorrhagic and grey lobulated tumour | Large cells with vacuolated cytoplasm | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Nob | Nob |
| Chondrosarcoma | Hard, grey-white lobulated and cartilaginous mass | Large bubbly-looking cells with stellate-shaped nuclei | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | n/a | n/a |
| Meningioma | Round and well circumscribed mass attached to the dura | Syncytial cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and vesicular nuclei | Yes | Yes | Yesa | Yes | No | No | n/a | Nob |
| Osteosarcoma | Bulky, grey-white mass with areas of haemorrhage | Spindle cells producing eosinophilic matrix (osteoid). 25% show osteoclast-like giant cells | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | Nob | Nob |
| Pituitary adenoma | Soft, cream-colored tumour from the sella turcica, usually invading adjacent structures | Round cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and spherical nuclei | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Nob | Nob |
| T-cell Lymphoma | Well circumscribed tumour mass, resembling inflammatory lesions | Highly vascularized tumour with small and round cells | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| B-cell Lymphoma | Well circumscribed tumour mass, resembling inflammatory lesions | Highly vascularized tumour with small and round cells | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Plasmacytoma | Soft and lobulated tissue, slightly pink- or cream-colored | Sheets of mature and immature plasma cells, with eccentric nuclei and “clock-face” chromatin | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | n/a | No | No | No |
aSeventy-five percent of malignant meningioma express cytokeratin; while no expression was found in benign meningiomas [60]
bThe negative staining refers to neoplastic cells. Immune infiltrating cells can be responsible for a positive staining