| Literature DB >> 31297550 |
Robert M Kwee1, Thomas C Kwee2.
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to review calcified or ossified benign soft tissue lesions that may simulate malignancy. We review the clinical presentations, locations, imaging characteristics, and differential diagnostic considerations of myositis ossificans, tophaceous gout, benign vascular lesions, calcific tendinopathy with osseous involvement, periosteal chondroma, primary synovial chondromatosis, Hoffa's disease, tumoral calcinosis, lipoma with metaplasia, calcifying aponeurotic fibroma, calcific myonecrosis, ancient schwannoma, and Castleman disease.Entities:
Keywords: Benign; Calcifications; Malignant; Ossification; Soft tissue lesion
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31297550 PMCID: PMC6813287 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-019-03272-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skeletal Radiol ISSN: 0364-2348 Impact factor: 2.199
Fig. 1Ossification versus calcification. a, b Mature bone shows an outer cortex and inner trabecular pattern. c, d Calcifications normally appear as mineralized densities
Fig. 2A 24-year-old man with myositis ossificans, early to intermediate stage (a, b) and late stage (c, d). a, b Initial radiography shows amorphous calcifications in the soft tissue at the posterolateral side of the distal femur. c, d Follow-up radiography after 1.5 years shows ossification
Fig. 3A 54-year-old woman with myositis ossificans, mature stage. Radiography shows a well-defined lesion with peripheral ossification in the soft tissue at the medial side of the right femoral diaphysis (arrow), representing mature stage myositis ossificans
Fig. 4A 6-year-old girl with myositis ossificans, intermediate stage. a Radiography shows an ill-defined calcified lesion cranial to the right greater trochanter. b Coronal turbo inversion recovery magnitude image shows extensive soft tissue edema surrounding the lesion in the right gluteus maximus muscle. c, d Coronal pre- (c) and postgadolinium (d) T1-weighted images with fat suppression show enhancement of the lesion in the right gluteus maximus muscle and surrounding soft tissue. Because of persisting pain, the lesion was finally resected and pathologically proven to be myositis ossificans
Fig. 5A 60-year-old woman with tophaceous gout. a, b Radiography (a) and coronal CT (b) show a soft tissue lesion with calcifications near the lateral epicondyle of the distal humerus. c Coronal postgadolinium T1-weighted images with fat suppression demonstrates peripheral enhancement of the lesion. Biopsy was performed, demonstrating monosodium urate crystals, consistent with gout
Fig. 6A 38-year-old man with a venous malformation. a Radiography shows suprapatellar phleboliths. b Sagittal T1-weighted image shows a lobulated mass with low signal intensity. c Axial proton-density weighted image with fat suppression shows the mass in the vastus medialis muscle to have high signal intensity and internal signal voids (arrowheads), representing phleboliths. d, e Axial pre- (d) and postgadolinium (e) T1-weighted images with fat suppression show enhancement of the mass. In this figure, fat overgrowth and serpentine morphology are also keys to the correct diagnosis of venous malformation
Fig. 7A 53-year-old woman with calcific tendinopathy of the infraspinatus tendon with osseous involvement. a Radiography shows soft tissue calcifications posteriorly to the humeral head. b Coronal oblique turbo inversion recovery magnitude image shows intra-osseous extension of calcification (arrowhead) and surrounding bone marrow edema. c Axial T1-weighted image with fat suppression after intra-articular injection of gadolinium shows calcifications which are located in the infraspinatus tendon and in the humeral head (arrowheads). There is no associated soft tissue mass
Fig. 8A 48-year-old man with periosteal chondroma. a Radiography shows soft tissue lesion with a calcified chondroid matrix lateral to the proximal phalanx of the first digit. b–d Axial T1-weighted image (b), coronal proton-density-weighted image with fat suppression (c), and coronal postgadolinium T1-weighted image with fat suppression (d) show pressure erosion of neighbouring bone without associated medullary bone. The lesion also displaces the flexor hallucis longus tendon. There is no soft tissue edema. The lesion shows a septal enhancement pattern (d)
Fig. 9A 16-year-old boy with periosteal chondroma. a Radiography shows a calcified chondroid matrix laterally to the proximal radial diaphysis. b, c Axial T1-weighted (a) and T2-weighted (b) images show that the lesion is located directly adjacent to the radius. Signal intensity of the lesion is nearly isointense to muscle on T1-weighted images and hyperintense to T2-weighted images, with areas of signal loss which represent the calcified chondroid matrix. d Coronal postgadolinium T1-weighted image with fat suppression shows a septal enhancement pattern
Fig. 10A 19-year-old man with primary synovial chondromatosis of the knee. a Radiography shows a soft tissue lesion with ring- and arc-like calcifications posteriorly to the knee. b Sagittal T1-weighted image shows an additional ossified fragment in the suprapatellar recess (arrowhead). c Axial T2*-weighted image shows the calcified part of the lesion as an area of signal loss (arrowhead). d Sagittal postgadolinium T1-weighted image with fat suppression shows diffusely thickened and enhancing synovium. The lesion posteriorly to the knee (arrowhead) shows no internal enhancement
Fig. 11A 68-year-old man with Hoffa’s disease. a Radiography shows multiple ossified fragments (arrow) in Hoffa’s fat pad. b Sagittal T1-weighted image shows the largest ossified fragment in Hoffa’s fat pad, with surrounding low signal intensity. c, d Sagittal (a) and coronal (b) proton-density-weighted images with fat suppression show high signal intensity in Hoffa’s fat pad with areas of low signal intensity, corresponding to fibrin and hemosiderin
Fig. 12A 62-year-old woman with tumoral calcinosis. a Radiography shows a well-circumscribed calcified soft tissue mass (arrow) near the right shoulder. b Axial CT that the calcified mass is located within the lateral part of the pectoralis major muscle and extends subcutaneously. c Axial T2-weighted image shows that the lesion has low signal intensity. d Axial T1-weighted image with fat suppression demonstrates low signal intensity of the mass and a thin rim of peripheral enhancement
Fig. 13A 68-year-old man with lipoma with metaplastic bone. a Axial CT shows a well-defined mass (arrow) with ossifications intermixed with fatty tissue in the left ischiofemoral space. b Axial T1-weighted image shows the fatty tissue within the mass. c, d Axial pre- (c) and postgadolinium (d) T1-weighted images with fat suppression show enhancing areas in the anterior part of the mass (arrowheads). Pathological analysis after resection confirmed lipoma with metaplastic bone
Fig. 14A 13-year-old boy with calcifying aponeurotic fibroma. a Ultrasound image in the sagittal plane shows a well-defined hypoechoic mass (arrow) with multiple fine hyperechoic reflections (representing fine calcifications) at the plantar side of the right forefoot. b Sagittal T1-weighted image demonstrates the mass (near the skin marker) to be isointense to muscle. c Coronal turbo inversion recovery magnitude image demonstrates the mass (arrow) to be hyperintense. Pathological analysis after resection confirmed aponeurotic fibroma with presence of multiple fine calcifications
Fig. 15A 72-year-old man with calcific myonecrosis of the anterior compartment of the right leg. a Radiography shows a soft tissue mass with extensive calcifications. b, c Axial (a) and coronal (b) proton-density weighed images shows the mass to be located within the anterior compartment of the right lower leg, with a liquid-appearing center. d Axial CT shows the typical peripheral calcifications
Fig. 16.A 69-year-old man with ancient schwannoma in the presacral space. Axial CT shows a well-defined mass with hypodense center, enhancing capsule, and peripheral calcifications (arrowheads) in the presacral space. Pathological analysis after biopsy confirmed ancient cystic schwannoma. The mass remained unchanged after 10 years’ follow-up
Fig. 17A 22-year-old woman with Castleman disease. a Axial CT shows a well-defined subcutaneous soft tissue mass with central calcification at the left thoracic region. b, c Axial pre- (b) and postgadolinium (c) T1-weighted images with fat suppression show homogeneous enhancement of the mass (except for the central calcification). The mass was biopsied and pathologically proven to be Castleman disease
Typical clinical features, specific imaging features, and main differential diagnostic considerations of calcified or benign soft tissue lesions that may simulate malignancy
| Calcified or ossified benign soft tissue lesion | Typical clinical features | Specific imaging features | Main differential diagnostic consideration(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Myositis ossificans | Pain, swelling, and joint stiffness following blunt soft tissue trauma | Calcified peripheral rim with a lucent center (end of intermediate stage) and pronounced peripheral bone formation (mature stage) | Soft tissue osteosarcoma |
| Tophaceous gout | Frequency increases with age, male predominance, elevated serum urate levels | Multifocality and presence of monosodium urate crystals, which can accurately be identified by dual-energy CT | Soft tissue sarcoma (synovial sarcoma) |
| Soft tissue venous malformation | Superficial lesions appear as faint blue, soft, easily compressible, and nonpulsatile masses, which enlarge with Valsalva maneuver | Presence of phleboliths, lack of flow voids, and slow gradual enhancement (of note, high flow vascular lesions tend to produce more “tram-track” calcifications seen in arteries) | Other soft tissue vascular malformations (e.g., lymphatic or arteriovenous malformation) |
| Calcific tendinopathy with osseous involvement | Pain and limitation of range of motion around the affected area | Location of calcifications in a tendon, absence of an associated soft tissue mass, and prominent associated bone marrow edema | Malignancy (e.g., soft tissue sarcoma, periosteal sarcoma, or metastatic disease) or infection |
| Periosteal chondroma | Often asymptomatic, but may present as palpable and painful masses with mechanical symptoms | Calcified chondroid matrix with scalloping and overhanging edges of cortex of adjacent bone and size < 3 cm | Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation, periosteal chondrosarcoma |
| Primary synovial chondromatosis | Knee and hip are predilection sites | Innumerable and similarly shaped intraarticular calcifications, chondroid ring-and-arc pattern of mineralization | Malignant transformation to synovial chondrosarcoma |
| Hoffa’s disease | In young women and persons practicing jumping sports | Low T1 and T2 signal intensity areas representing fibrin and hemosiderin (subacute and chronic phases), and presence of ossified fragments (chronic phase) | Synovial sarcoma, venous malformation |
| Tumoral calcinosis | Painless mass(es) around the hip, elbow, shoulder, foot, or wrist | Lobulated calcific and cystic soft tissue mass, multifocality | Calcinosis associated with chronic renal failure* |
| Lipoma with metaplastic bone | Symptoms due to mass effect | Presence of fat, bone, and calcifications | Soft tissue sarcoma (liposarcoma) |
| Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma | Slow-growing mass that does not limit joint motion in children and adolescents (males more commonly than females) | Most commonly affects the deep volar fascia, tendons, and aponeuroses of the hands, followed by the feet, and may calcify | Soft tissue sarcoma (e.g., synovial sarcoma or undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma) |
| Calcific myonecrosis | Slowly enlarging, usually painful mass in the anterior lower leg compartment, and remote history of compartment syndrome and/or vascular injury after fracture | Compartmental involvement of a well-defined mass with liquid-appearing center and peripheral calcifications | Soft tissue sarcoma, infection |
| Ancient schwannoma | In elderly patients, located deep in the head and neck, chest, retroperitoneum, or pelvis | Cystic necrosis and calcifications | Soft tissue sarcoma, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor |
| Castleman disease | Either asymptomatic or local symptoms due to mass effect in unicentric disease, whereas B-symptoms, generalized lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, and splenomegaly can be seen in multicentric disease | Internal calcification (in 5–10% of lesions) and homogeneous and intense enhancement | Lymphoma, soft tissue sarcoma |
*Tumoral calcinosis and calcinosis associated with chronic renal failure have similar radiologic and histopathologic appearance. Therefore, whenever the diagnosis of tumoral calcinosis is suggested by imaging, calcium-phosphate metabolic parameters and renal function should be checked