Cytogenetic-Morphologic Correlations in Aneurysmal Bone Cyst, Giant Cell Tumor of Bone and Combined Lesions. A Report from the CHAMP Study Group
Author(s) -
Raf Sciot,
Howard D. Dorfman,
Peter Brys,
Paola Dal Cin,
Ivo De Wever,
Christopher D.�M. Fletcher,
Kjell Jonson,
Nils Mandahl,
Fredrik Mertens,
Felix Mitelman,
Juan Rosaí,
Anders Rydholm,
Ignace Samson,
Giovanni Tallini,
Herman Van den Berghe,
Roberta Vanni,
Helena Willén
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
modern pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.596
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1530-0285
pISSN - 0893-3952
DOI - 10.1038/modpathol.3880224
Subject(s) - aneurysmal bone cyst , pathology , giant cell tumor of bone , giant cell , primary bone , giant cell tumors , biology , anatomy , medicine , lesion
Aneurysmal bone cyst and giant cell tumor of bone are relatively rare bone tumors that sometimes coexist. We examined the karyotypes of 3 aneurysmal bone cysts, 12 giant cell tumors, and 3 combined lesions. All aneurysmal bone cysts showed involvement of chromosome segments 17p11-13 and/or 16q22. In addition, in 1 of the 3 giant cell tumors with secondary aneurysmal bone cyst, both chromosome bands were rearranged as well, albeit not in a balanced translocation. Seven out of 12 giant cell tumors were characterized by telomeric associations. One giant cell tumor showed a dup(16)(q13q22), suggesting the presence of a (minor) secondary aneurysmal bone cyst component, despite the absence of histological proof. Our results, combined with literature data further substantiate that segments 16q22 and 17p11-13 are nonrandomly involved in at least some aneurysmal bone cysts, irrespective of subtype (primary, secondary, intra/extraosseous, solid or classic). These findings strongly suggest that some aneurysmal bone cysts are true neoplasms. In addition, telomeric associations are the most frequent chromosomal aberrations in giant cell tumor of bone, the significance of which remains elusive. In combined giant cell tumor/aneurysmal bone cyst each component seems to retain its own karyotypic abnormality.
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