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Polish Journal of Pathology
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3/2009
vol. 60
 
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Correct answer to the quiz. Check your diagnosis
Proliferative myositis with bone/osteoid formation

Janusz Ryś
,
Andrzej Gruchała
,
Elżbieta Korobowicz

Pol J Pathol 2009; 3: 144-146
Online publish date: 2009/12/14
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There are several reports in the literature pointing out to the risk of misinterpreting pseudomalignant osseous tumours as osteogenic sarcoma because of the high cellularity and mitotic activity of tumour cells [1-5]. However, in most of such cases the proper differentiation between sarcoma and pseudomali-gnant proliferation is possible. Despite a charac-teristic clinical picture of pseudomalignant changes, there are several morphological features that enable differentiation between sarcoma and the pseudo-malignant tumour.
Clinically, pseudomalignant proliferations are characterized by a very rapid growth, counted in days or weeks, in contrast to a much longer growth typical of sarcomas [5-8].
Morphologically, the lack of high nuclear and/or nucleolar atypia and atypical mitoses, as well as the demonstration of zonal maturing of the bone phenomenon, evident in cases of myositis ossificans [6, 7] and checkerboard pattern typical of proliferative myositis [6, 8, 9] are the most useful features in the diagnosis of pseudomalignant changes.
The checkerboard pattern of the growth is
a striking feature of the histological texture of the presented case. It is characterized by alternating areas of proliferating fibroblasts or myofibroblasts and remnants of infiltrated muscle tissue (Fig. 1-4). However, the skeletal muscle fibres are relatively unaffected except for the presence of secondary atrophy, with neither sarcolemmal proliferation nor any evidence of skeletal muscle regeneration [6, 8, 9] (Fig. 1 and 3). The other conspicuous histological sign of proliferative myositis is the presence of large basophilic ganglion-like cells (Fig. 4 arrow) that usually have single eccentrically situated nuclei. The unusual feature of the described tumour is the presence of foci of osteoid formation (Fig. 3 asterisk). However, a few cases of proliferative myositis with bone and/or osteoid formation were reported [1, 6]. Such cases should be differentiated mainly from myositis ossificans. The key features of differential diagnosis between these two entities, as well as extraskeletal osteogenic sarcoma are depicted in the table I.

References
1. Dahl I, Angervall L. Pseudosarcomatous lesions of the soft tissue reported as sarcoma during a 6-year period (1958-1963). Acta Pathol Microbiol Scand Sect A 1977; 85: 917-930.
2. Horie Y, Morimura T. Fibro-osseous pseudotumor of the digits arising in the subungal region: a rare benign lesion simulating extraskeletal osteosarcoma. Pathol Int 1995; 45: 536-540.
3. de Silva MV, Reid R. Myositis ossificans and fibroosseous pseudotumor of digits: a clinicopathological review of 64 cases with emphasis on diagnostic pitfalls. Int J Surg Pathol 2003; 11: 187-195.
4. Ragunananthan N, Sugavanam C. Pseudomalignant myositis ossificans mimicking osteosarcoma: a case report. J Orthop Surg (Hong Kong) 2006; 14: 219-221.
5. Rosenberg AE. Pseudosarcomas of soft tissue. Arch Pathol Lab Med 2008; 132: 579-586
6. Weiss SW, Goldblum JR. Enzinger and Weiss’s Soft Tissue Tumors Fifth Edition Mosby Elsevier 2008; 192-193.
7. Miettinen M. Diagnostic Soft Tissue Pathology. Churchill Livingstone 2003.
8. Montgomery E. Soft tissue tumors. In: Silverberg’s Principles and Practice of Surgical Pathology and Cytopathology. Silverberg SG, DeLellis RA, Frable WJ, et al. (eds). Churchill Livingstone 2006; 307-405.
9. Evans H, Bridge JA. Proliferative fascitis and proliferative myositis. In World Health Organization Classification of Tumors. Pathology and Genetics of Tumours of Soft Tissue and Bone. Fletcher CDM, Unni KK, Mertens F (eds). IARCPress, Lyon 2002; 50-51.

Address for correspondence
Janusz Ryś
MD, PhD
Department of Tumour Pathology
Centre of Oncology Maria Skłodowska-Curie
Memorial Institute
Cracow Branch
ul. Garncarska 11
31-115 Kraków
phone and fax +48 12 421 20 98
Copyright: © 2009 Polish Association of Pathologists and the Polish Branch of the International Academy of Pathology This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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