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Conventional Chordoma

Conventional chordoma is a malignant tumor with a phenotype that recapitulates notochord and that usually arises in bones of the axial skeleton.

Symptoms & Causes

Introduction

Conventional chordoma is a malignant tumor that develops in the axial skeleton, mimicking notochord tissue. It most commonly occurs in the base of the skull, spine, and sacrum.

Reference
WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. Soft tissue and bone tumours [Internet]. Lyon (France): International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2020 [cited 2024 09 11]. (WHO classification of tumours series, 5th ed.; vol. 3). Available from: https://tumourclassification.iarc.who.int/chapters/33.

Related Terminology
None

Subtype(s)
Chondroid chordoma

Symptoms

Chordomas most commonly present with pain and site-related neurological symptoms.

Localization

Chordomas are chiefly located in the axial skeleton, involving bones from the base of the skull to the coccyx, the frequency being 32% skull-based, 32.8% in the mobile spine, and 29.2% in the sacrum and coccyx, according to the SEER Program. Only a small number of extra-axial and extraskeletal chordomas are reported. tumors in children and young adults have a greater propensity to occur in the base of the skull and upper cervical sites.

Epidemiology

The incidence of chordoma is 0.08 cases per 100,000 person-years, with an M:F ratio of approximately 1.8:1. Chordoma rarely occurs in the black African population but appears to be represented equally in people of other ethnic groups. However, in one review, African-Americans were more represented in the pediatric cohort than in the adult cohort. All ages are affected, but chordoma most commonly occurs in the fifth to seventh decades of life.

Etiology

In rare cases, chordoma is associated with a germline tandem duplication of TBXT, and rare cases of childhood chordoma occur in the setting of tuberous sclerosis, caused by germline loss-of-function mutations in the tumor suppressor gene TSC1 or TSC2.

Diagnosis & Treatment

Staging

Staging is according to bone sarcoma protocols (see TNM staging of tumors of bone).

Pathogenesis

The hallmark of chordoma is the expression of brachyury (encoded by TBXT). In 27% of cases, this is associated with copy-number gain of TBXT, a transcription factor required for notochordal development. This recapitulates the tandem duplication of TBXT that underlies familial chordoma. The strong association of rs2305089 in TBXT in patients with chordoma suggests this SNP contributes substantially to the development of chordoma. Brachyury has also been shown to act as a master regulator of an elaborate oncogenic transcriptional network encompassing diverse signaling pathways, including components of the cell cycle and extracellular matrix. Growth arrest and senescence upon silencing of TBXT in chordoma cell lines add to the critical role of TBXT in chordoma. Additionally, PI3K signalling mutations have been reported in 16% of cases, and mutations (always inactivating) of LYST have been described in 10% of cases. Phosphorylated and total EGFR (HER1) appears to play an important role in the disease, as it is expressed in 47% and 67% of chordomas, respectively, and EGFR (HER1) inhibitors reduce cell survival.

Macroscopic Appearance

Chordoma presents as a lobular solid mass with a gelatinous appearance, destroying bone and extending into surrounding soft tissue. Sacrococcygeal tumors tend to be larger than those at other sites, most likely related to a longer symptom-free period.

Histopathology

Conventional chordoma is composed of large epithelioid cells with clear to light eosinophilic cytoplasm, separated into lobules by fibrous septa. The tumor cells may have bubbly cytoplasm (physaliphorous cells). They are arranged as cords and nests embedded within an abundant extracellular myxoid matrix, or as more densely arranged epithelioid packets. Chordomas often show a substantial degree of intratumoral cytological heterogeneity, with features including nuclear atypia and pleomorphism ranging from minimal to severe. In the latter, mitotic figures can be easily detected, and large areas of tumor necrosis may be present. Chondroid chordoma refers to chordoma in which a large area of the matrix mimics hyaline cartilaginous tumors.

Immunohistochemistry
The tumor is diffusely immunoreactive for cytokeratin and EMA and shows variable S100 positivity.

Differential diagnosis
The diagnostic hallmark is the expression of brachyury, which helps to distinguish chordoma from chondrosarcoma, carcinoma, and chordoid meningioma. The differential diagnosis includes metastatic carcinoma, chondrosarcoma, chordoid meningioma, and myoepithelial tumor of bone.

Cytology

Not clinically relevant.

Prognosis and Prediction

The overall median survival time is 7 years. As many as 40% of chordomas arising at sites other than the base of the skull metastasize. Metastatic sites include lung, bone, lymph nodes, and subcutaneous tissue. It is unclear whether chondroid chordomas behave differently than conventional chordomas.

Clinical Features

Diagnostic Molecular Pathology

No diagnostic molecular markers have been reported.

Essential and Desirable Diagnostic Criteria

Essential: bone tumor compatible with imaging; voluminous epithelioid cells exhibiting notochordal differentiation embedded in copious myxoid matrix; brachyury and cytokeratin expression.

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