Kransdorf M J
Department of Radiology, Saint Mary's Hospital, Richmond, VA 23226.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1995 Jan;164(1):129-34. doi: 10.2214/ajr.164.1.7998525.
The purpose of this study was to determine the relative prevalence, age at presentation, sex distribution, and skeletal distribution of malignant soft-tissue tumors and to ascertain the relative frequency of these tumors in specific anatomic locations and age groups among a population of patients in a large pathologic consultation service.
The computer diagnoses of 39,179 lesions occurring in 38,484 patients seen by soft-tissue pathologists at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology during the 10-year period from January 1, 1980, to December 31, 1989, were retrospectively reviewed. All lesions were placed in one of 121 major categories in accordance with the classification system used by the World Health Organization and coded to one of 32 anatomic locations, such as hand, wrist, forearm, and so forth. Age and sex also were recorded. For purposes of analysis, all lesions were placed in one of 10 categories: hand and wrist, upper extremity, proximal limb girdle (axilla and shoulder), foot and ankle, lower extremity, hip and buttocks region, head and neck, trunk, retroperitoneum, and other lesions. The study group included 31,047 mesenchymal lesions, of which 12,370 were malignant.
More than 80% of malignant tumors were classified into eight diagnostic categories: malignant fibrous histiocytoma (24%), liposarcoma (14%), leiomyosarcoma (8%), malignant schwannoma (6%), dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (6%), synovial sarcoma (5%), fibrosarcoma (5%), and sarcoma, not classified further (12%). Approximately 79% of all malignant tumors were classified into five diagnoses for each age and location. With the distal upper extremity (hand and wrist) as an example, 50% of malignant lesions in the 16-25-year-old group were classified as epithelioid sarcoma (29%), malignant fibrous histiocytoma (13%), and synovial sarcoma (8%). For the same location but for children 5 years old or younger, almost 50% of malignant tumors were classified as infantile fibrosarcoma.
Despite the multitude of pathologic possibilities, most malignant soft-tissue tumors are classified into a small number of diagnoses. These may be further defined when the location of the lesion and the age of the patient are considered. Knowledge of tumor prevalence will assist radiologists in establishing a suitably ordered differential diagnosis when a soft-tissue tumor has a nonspecific radiologic appearance.
本研究的目的是确定恶性软组织肿瘤的相对患病率、就诊年龄、性别分布和骨骼分布,并确定在大型病理会诊服务的患者群体中,这些肿瘤在特定解剖部位和年龄组中的相对频率。
回顾性分析了1980年1月1日至1989年12月31日这10年间,武装部队病理研究所软组织病理学家对38484例患者的39179处病变进行的计算机诊断。所有病变均根据世界卫生组织使用的分类系统归入121个主要类别之一,并编码至32个解剖部位之一,如手、腕、前臂等。同时记录了年龄和性别。为便于分析,所有病变被归入10个类别之一:手和腕、上肢、近端肢体带(腋窝和肩部)、足和踝、下肢、髋部和臀部区域、头颈部、躯干、腹膜后以及其他病变。研究组包括31047处间叶组织病变,其中12370处为恶性。
超过80%的恶性肿瘤被归入八个诊断类别:恶性纤维组织细胞瘤(24%)、脂肪肉瘤(14%)、平滑肌肉瘤(8%)、恶性神经鞘瘤(6%)、隆突性皮肤纤维肉瘤(6%)、滑膜肉瘤(5%)、纤维肉瘤(5%)以及未进一步分类的肉瘤(12%)。在每个年龄和部位,约79%的所有恶性肿瘤被归入五种诊断。以上肢远端(手和腕)为例,16至25岁组中50%的恶性病变被归类为上皮样肉瘤(29%)、恶性纤维组织细胞瘤(13%)和滑膜肉瘤(8%)。对于相同部位但5岁及以下的儿童,几乎50%的恶性肿瘤被归类为婴儿纤维肉瘤。
尽管存在多种病理可能性,但大多数恶性软组织肿瘤可归入少数几种诊断。当考虑病变部位和患者年龄时,这些诊断可能会进一步明确。了解肿瘤患病率将有助于放射科医生在软组织肿瘤具有非特异性放射学表现时建立适当的有序鉴别诊断。