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  • Title: Clinicopathologic characterization of malignant chondroblastoma: a neoplasm with locally aggressive behavior and metastatic potential that closely mimics chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma.
    Author: Papke DJ, Hung YP, Schaefer IM, Bredella MA, Charville GW, Reith JD, Fletcher CDM, Nielsen GP, Hornick JL.
    Journal: Mod Pathol; 2020 Nov; 33(11):2295-2306. PubMed ID: 32601382.
    Abstract:
    Chondroblastoma is currently classified as a benign neoplasm; however, chondroblastoma and chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma have morphologic overlap, raising the possibility that some tumors diagnosed as chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma might actually represent malignant chondroblastoma. The H3F3B K36M point mutation, which has not been reported in osteosarcoma, is identified in 95% of chondroblastomas and is reliably detectable by immunohistochemistry (IHC). We reviewed 11 tumors diagnosed as atypical chondroblastoma, malignant chondroblastoma, or chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma (median follow-up: 8.8 years; range: 4 months-26.4 years). Seven chondroblastomas with cytologic atypia and permeative growth were designated "malignant chondroblastoma"; six were H3K36M-positive by IHC. Relative to conventional chondroblastoma, malignant chondroblastoma occurred in older individuals (median: 52 years; range: 29-57 years) and arose at unusual sites. Three of four tumors with long-term follow-up recurred, and one patient died of widespread metastases. One was found to have chromosomal copy number alter4ations and a SETD2 mutation in addition to H3F3B K36M. The four remaining tumors were classified as chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma. Chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma occurred in younger patients (median: 21 years; range: 19-40 years) than malignant chondroblastoma. In contrast to malignant chondroblastoma, all had regions of malignant cells forming bone. Two of three patients with long-term follow-up developed recurrences, and two died of disease, one with widespread metastases. No mutations in H3F3A/H3F3B were detected by Sanger sequencing. While malignant chondroblastoma and chondroblastoma-like osteosarcoma show significant morphologic overlap, they have distinct clinical presentations and genetic findings. When considering this challenging differential diagnosis, IHC using histone H3 mutation-specific antibodies is a critical diagnostic adjunct.
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