Metaphyseal fibrous defect
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Metaphyseal fibrous defect, abbreviated MFD, is a common benign abnormality of the metaphysis, classically seen in children and young adults.
Metaphyseal fibrous defect | |
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Diagnosis in short | |
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Synonyms | Nonossifying fibroma |
Clinical history | Incidental radiograhic finding |
Radiology | Lucent defect |
They are also known as fibrous cortical defect, fibrous metaphyseal defect, and fibroxanthoma of bone. Nonossifying fibroma is a larger lesion but otherwise identical.
General
- Common.
- Non-neoplastic.
- Self-limited.
- Skeletally immature individuals, children and adolescents.
- Often small lesions discovered as an radiographic incidentaloma.
- Rarely seen as a pathologic specimen (should not be biopsied).
Site
- Metaphysis of distal femur or proximal tibia (80%).
- Cortical.
- Metaphysis.
- Long bones.
- Eccentric location.
Gross
Firm, granular, brown to yellow to red.
Microscopic
Features:
- Spindle cells without cytologic atypia are arranged in a storiform pattern.
- Scattered chronic inflammatory cells and benign giant cells.
- Foam cells and hemosiderin deposition are present.
- Mitoses are seen but cytologic atypia is absent.
DDx (microscopic):
- Giant cell tumour of bone - epiphyseal location, occurs in adults.
Relevant Diagnostic Groups
Images
Stains
Not relevant.
IHC
Not relevant
Molecular
Not relevant
Syndromes
Jaffe-Campanacci syndrome [3]
Clinical history
- Incidental radiographic finding
- Pathologic fracture
Prognosis
- Ideally should not be biopsied
- Radiographically characteristic and benign
- Ideally should not be treated or even biopsied
- Spontaneously resolve by ossification
- May resolve into a 'bone island'
Radiographic findings
Sharply demarcated, lucent, loculated, meta-diaphyseal lesion surrounded by a rim of sclerotic bone
Sign out
BONE; CURETTAGE: METAPHYSEAL FIBROUS DEFECT / NONOSSIFYING FIBROMA.
See also
References
- ↑ URL: http://radiopaedia.org/articles/lytic-bone-lesion-mnemonic. Accessed on: October 14, 2014.
- ↑ URL: http://radiopaedia.org/articles/skeletal-do-not-touch-lesions-1. Accessed on: October 14, 2014.
- ↑ URL: http://www.bonetumor.org/plasma-cell-tumors/jaffe-campanacci-syndrome. Accessed on: October 14, 2014.