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- AKA Non-ossifying fibroma
Definition
- Benign well-circumscribed eccentric solitary lesion in metaphysis of long bone in children
- Multiple lesions rare
- Lesions seen in children called fibrous cortical defect
- Lesions seen in adults traditionally called non-ossifying fibroma
Epidemiology
- 35% incidence in normal children on radiological surveys
- Most common skeletal lesion
- Most common cause of pathological fracture in children
- Peak age of 15 years
- Gender
- Localized defect in cortex of long bone
- Failure of bone to form
- Self limiting
- Usually ossify by early adulthood
- Location
- 50% about the knee
- Distal tibia
- Proximal femur
- Proximal humerus
- Lesions usually regress spontaneously
Clinical Features
- Most incidental findings on XR & asymptomatic
- Rarely have pathological fracture
Radiological
- Cortical eccentric position in metaphysis (cf. Fibrous Dysplasia)
- Well-demarcated central lucent zones surrounded by scalloped sclerotic margins
- Usually < 1/3 diameter of bone
- May be elongated in longitudinal axis of bone
- Will migrate away from the epiphysis with growth
- As regresses replaced with residual sclerosis
Pathology
Gross
- Soft, friable, yellow or brown tissue
Microscopic
- Cellular tissue
- Unremarkable spindle cells in interlacing or whorled pattern
- Interspersed with multinucleated giant cells & histiocytes
- May be similar to GCT
Differential Diagnosis
Treatment
- Usually observation only
- Serial observation (XR 4/12 for 1st year then yearly)
- Usually don’t require biopsy
- Biopsy if uncertain
- If > 50% of diameter of bone
- If pathological fracture
- Treat closed if possible
- Fracture heals in normal length of time
- Lesion may heal with fracture union
- If persists then curettage & graft