Introduction
Low-grade chondrosarcomas (LG-CS), including atypical cartilaginous tumors (ACT), are locally aggressive lesions. The focus of the discussion sits on the differential diagnosis between benign lesions or aggressive cartilaginous tumors and on their treatment: intralesional curettage or wide resection. This study presents the results obtained in the surgical treatment of 21 cases of LG-CS.
Methods
This retrospective study includes 21 consecutive patients from a single center with LG-CS who underwent surgery from 2013 to 2021. Fourteen were located in the appendicular skeleton, and seven in the axial (shoulder blade, spine, or pelvis). Mortality rate, recurrence, metastatic disease, overall survival, recurrence-free survival, and metastatic disease-free survival were analyzed for each type of procedure and each disease location. Operative complications and residual tumors were also recorded in cases where resection was performed. Survival was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method.
Results
Thirteen patients underwent intralesional curettage (11 appendicular and 2 axial lesions), and eight underwent wide resection (5 axial and 3 appendicular). There were six recurrences during the follow-up, 43% of the axial lesions recurred, rising to 100% in axial curetted ones. Appendicular LG-CS recurred in 21% of cases, and only 18% of curetted appendicular lesions were not eradicated. The overall survival for the entire follow-up is 90.5%, and the 5-year survival rate is 83% (12 patients have adequate follow-up). Recurrence-free and metastasis-free survival were higher in resection cases, with 75% and 87.5%, vs. curettage 69.2% and 76.9%, respectively. In 9% of cases, the preoperative biopsy was inconsistent with the pathology of the surgical specimen.
Discussion
LG-CS and ACT are described as having high survival and low potential for metastatic disease. For this reason, these lesions are subject to a change in treatment philosophy to reflect these characteristics. Intra-lesional curettage is advocated as a less invasive technique for eradicating atypical cartilage tumors and has fewer and less severe complications, which was in accordance with our findings. Diagnosis, however, is challenging; misgrading is frequent and should be considered. Because of this risk of under-treating higher-grade lesions, some authors still defend wide-resection as the treatment of choice. We observed a trend towards longer survival, less recurrence, and metastatic disease with wide resection. Metastatic disease was higher than expected, present in 19% of cases, and always associated with local recurrence.
Conclusion
LG-CS is still a diagnostic and treatment challenge; patient selection is fundamental. Overall survival is high, independent of treatment choice or lesion location. We found a higher rate of metastatic disease than described in the literature; this, coupled with a misgrading rate of 9%, reflects the difficulty of pre...