Cancer Management and Research (May 2024)
MRI Differential Diagnosis and Guidance for Puncture Biopsy of Musculoskeletal Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma and Well Differentiated Liposarcoma
Abstract
Tianwen Zhang, Bin Liu Department of Orthopaedic Soft Tissue Surgery, Guangxi Medical University Cancer Hospital, Nanning, 530021, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Bin Liu, Email [email protected]: The study aimed to investigate the significantly different imaging characteristics of musculoskeletal dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLP) and well differentiated liposarcoma (WDLP) on MRI, which in turn could guide puncture biopsy.Materials and Methods: This study included 14 patients with DDLP and 16 patients with WDLP, all of whom were confirmed by histopathological examination. The MRI manifestations of these two pathologies were retrospectively reviewed and compared. Furthermore, a step-by-step procedure regarding preoperative puncture biopsy of fatty masses that are suspicious for WD/DD was designed.Results: Fatty signals can be found in almost all WDs, with a greater proportion of non-fatty areas in DD compared to WD, and it is reasonable to consider WD more likely when the non-fatty areas of the tumor are < 25% (p < 0.05), while it is reasonable to consider DD more likely when the non-fatty areas of the tumor are > 50% (p < 0.05), and the MRI signals in DD are more complex, inhomogeneous (p < 0.01), usually showed significant enhancement (p < 0.01), and the margins of the tumor were usually indistinct (p < 0.01); and imaging features such as tumor size, vascularity, necrosis, and peritumoral edema did not serve as distinguishing features between the two (p > 0.05).Conclusion: DD has a greater proportion of non-fatty components, with more complex and inhomogeneous MRI signals, and typically shows significant enhancement, with usually indistinct margins of the tumor, in which the inhomogeneous manifestations are associated with the histological components. The possibility of DD should be considered in fatty tumors with non-fatty areas > 25%, for which puncture biopsy is necessary, while simultaneous puncture of low, moderate, high-signal areas within the non-fatty area could improve the accuracy of preoperative puncture pathology.Keywords: liposarcoma, dedifferentiated liposarcoma, well-differentiated liposarcoma, magnetic resonance imaging, puncture biopsy