Porcellato Ilaria, Giglia Giuseppe, Leonardi Leonardo
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Perugia, 06121 Perugia, Italy.
Animals (Basel). 2025 Feb 27;15(5):699. doi: 10.3390/ani15050699.
Giant cell tumor of bone (GCTb), formerly also known as osteoclastoma, is a pathological entity that in veterinary medicine is still undefined and, probably, underdiagnosed. In humans, GCTb is recognized as a primary benign bone tumor, locally aggressive, with high local recurrence rates, with controversial histogenesis that can rarely progress or present as a malignant form. In pets, this tumor is still considered rare, though the possibility of underdiagnosis is significant. Hence, the aim of the present study is to provide a histological and immunohistochemical characterization of a small case series of presumptive feline GCTb, comparing our results to the data reported for the human counterpart. Searching our archive, we found, from 2010 to 2023, only three diagnosed cases of GCTb from domestic cats (felis catus). After diagnosis revision, the samples were submitted to immunohistochemistry for Iba1, TRAP, SATB2, RUNX2, RANK, karyopherin α2 (KPNA-2), and osteocalcin. Ki-67 index was also evaluated. Results showed that the multinucleated giant cells were positive for Iba1, TRAP, and RANK, accounting for their osteoclastic origin. On the other side, mononuclear cells were mostly positive for osteoblast markers such as RUNX2, SATB2, and KPNA-2, whereas tumor-associated macrophages showed positivity for Iba1. Hence, results on the cell types characterizing the feline GCTb were comparable to those described in the human form of the tumor. Currently, diagnostic criteria for GCTBs in cats and, in domestic animals more broadly, are still lacking. This study provides valuable data into the immunohistochemical characteristics of the cell populations in feline GCTBs, enhancing veterinarians' and pathologists' knowledge for its diagnosis, ultimately improving patient care. Larger case series, complete with follow-up information, molecular analyses for specific mutations, and imaging of both tumors and patients, are needed to improve identification and achieve greater sensitivity in diagnosing this unique tumor.
骨巨细胞瘤(GCTb),以前也被称为破骨细胞瘤,是一种在兽医学中仍未明确且可能诊断不足的病理实体。在人类中,GCTb被认为是一种原发性良性骨肿瘤,具有局部侵袭性,局部复发率高,其组织发生存在争议,很少会进展或表现为恶性形式。在宠物中,这种肿瘤仍被认为很罕见,尽管漏诊的可能性很大。因此,本研究的目的是对一小例疑似猫GCTb病例系列进行组织学和免疫组织化学特征分析,并将我们的结果与人类同类肿瘤的报道数据进行比较。在我们的档案中搜索发现,从2010年到2023年,仅诊断出3例家猫(猫科动物)的GCTb病例。在诊断修订后,将样本进行免疫组织化学检测,检测指标包括Iba1、TRAP、SATB2、RUNX2、RANK、核转运蛋白α2(KPNA - 2)和骨钙素。还评估了Ki - 67指数。结果显示,多核巨细胞对Iba1、TRAP和RANK呈阳性,这表明它们起源于破骨细胞。另一方面,单核细胞大多对成骨细胞标志物如RUNX2、SATB2和KPNA - 2呈阳性,而肿瘤相关巨噬细胞对Iba1呈阳性。因此,猫GCTb特征性细胞类型的结果与人类肿瘤形式中描述的结果相当。目前,猫以及更广泛的家畜中GCTb的诊断标准仍然缺乏。本研究为猫GCTb中细胞群体的免疫组织化学特征提供了有价值的数据,增强了兽医和病理学家对其诊断的认识,最终改善了患者护理。需要更大的病例系列,包括随访信息、特定突变的分子分析以及肿瘤和患者的影像学检查,以提高对这种独特肿瘤的识别并实现更高的诊断敏感性。