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Osteofibrous Dysplasia With Rhabdoid Elements In A 38-year-old Man With Spontaneous Regression Over Five Years: A Case Report

Exner, G. U. 2018Other/Unknown

Exner, G. U., von Hochstetter, A. R., & Pfirrmann, C. W. A. (2018). Osteofibrous Dysplasia with Rhabdoid Elements in a 38-Year-Old Man with Spontaneous Regression Over Five Years: A Case Report. JBJS case connector, 8(3), e51. https://doi.org/10.2106/JBJS.CC.17.00294

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Abstract

CASE: A 38-year-old man presented with multifocal, partially confluent osteolytic lesions in the proximal dia-meta-epiphyseal region of the proximal aspect of the left tibia, which had been found incidentally when a radiograph was made after a rotational knee injury. When the results of a percutaneous core needle biopsy proved inconclusive, an open biopsy was performed. Osteofibrous dysplasia (OFD) with scattered groups of plump cells with a rhabdoid phenotype, shown to express both vimentin and pan-cytokeratin, was found. Because the lesion was an incidental finding, we decided to proceed with observation. Three months after the open biopsy, imaging showed marked regression of the lesion; there was nearly complete normalization 5 years later. CONCLUSION: To our knowledge, there has been only 1 prior reported case with these pathologic features, and there have been no reports of complete spontaneous regression in an adult patient with OFD. Treatment recommendations for OFD and for OFD-like adamantinoma range from observation to aggressive resection.

Case Details

Disease Location

Tibia

Personal Characteristics

37-year-old man

Clinical Characteristics

Rotational injury to the left knee while running down stairs. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed multifocal, partially confluent osteolytic lesions in the proximal dia-meta-epiphyseal region of the tibia, as well as a focal lesion in the proximal fibular metaphysis. Cortical breakthrough was seen at the tibial tuberosity and at the fibula into the tibiofibular joint. A percutaneous core needle biopsy showed foci of increased, nonspecific osteoblastic and osteoclastic activity. PET/CT showed focal activity of the osteolytic lesions that corresponded with the MRI of the tibia and the fibula. An open biopsy was performed one month later,

Remission Characteristics

Open biopsy showed corticocancellous fragments with the appearance of “normal bone”

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Touching the lesion may have elicited an autoimmune response.

Clinical Treatment

Biopsy