Symptoms & Causes
Introduction
Secondary peripheral ACT/CS1 is a low-grade cartilage-producing tumor that develops from the cartilaginous cap of an osteochondroma, presenting as a locally aggressive neoplasm.
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
Acceptable: low-grade peripheral chondrosarcoma.
Subtype(s)
None
Symptoms
Patients usually present with a longstanding mass with recent rapid enlargement or pain. Tumor growth after puberty and pain should raise suspicion for malignant progression.
Localization
Localization in the flat bones (CS1) includes the ilium (19%), followed by the scapula (15%), pubic bone (10%), and ribs (10%). In the appendicular skeleton (ACT), the tibia (12%) and femur (11%) are most often affected.
Epidemiology
Progression towards secondary peripheral ACT/CS1 occurs predominantly in patients aged 20–40 years (in 75.2%), and 56.2% of cases occur at the pelvis and proximal femur. Thus, patients with secondary peripheral chondrosarcoma are 1–2 decades younger than those with primary chondrosarcoma. After progression in osteochondroma, > 90% of these neoplasms are ACT/CS1, whereas only 9% are grade 2 or 3.
Etiology
Patients with multiple osteochondromas, carrying germline mutations in EXT1 or EXT2, are at increased risk of developing ACT/CS1 within the cartilaginous cap of an osteochondroma. The risk is estimated to be as high as about 5% for patients with multiple osteochondromas, compared with about 1% for those with solitary osteochondromas.