Discussion
Osteolipoma terms are used for osseous tissue
containing lipoma in soft tissue that has no involvement
with any bone. If they have any involvement with a
nearby bone, they are called as ossifying parosteal
lipoma. Osseous differentiation in lipoma is rare.[
6]
Osseous and chondroid differentiation is even more
rare. If a lipoma contains both osseous and chondroid
differentiation, it is called an osteochondrolipoma.
Osteochondrolipoma is an extremely rare histological
subtype of lipoma. This tumor may occur at almost
any site of the body, notably in the maxillofacial
region, and be localized subcutaneously (superficial)
or profoundly. Chest wall localization is extremely
rare. Cases that have been reported including the
present case are shown in Table
1. Two of the tumors
were localized at subscapular region, one at scapular
region, one at left axilla, and the present case was localized at chest wall. There was a predominance of
sex in favor of males (four males, one female) and the
average patient age was 48 years. The clinical history
is usually that of a painless, slow-growing mass. In
the first case,[
2] the patient admitted with a painless
small nodule that was noticed a few months before.
In the second case,[
3] there was an enlarging painless
mass that was noticed five years before. In the third
case,[
4] the patient had a palpable painless mass that
was noticed a month before (Table
1). In the present
case, the patient noticed the lesion 15 years before
and it began to grow during the past year. Lesion was
located superficially. Like many other tumors, the
etiology of lipoma and osteochondrolipoma is still
uncertain. Moreover, the etiology of cartilage and
osseous areas in lipomas is still controversial. There
are two main hypotheses for the etiopathogenesis.
First suggests that these tumors occur due to the
differentiation of adipose tissue-originated stem cells.
According to the second hypothesis, these tumors
grow as a result of metaplasia of fibroblasts after
repetitive trauma, ischemia or metabolic changes.[
1]
There was no trauma history in the first and third
cases. In the second case, act of external forces was
held responsible due to the localization of the tumor.
There was no trauma history in the present case. Only
rheumatoid arthritis was positive as comorbidity.
In other cases, no pathogenesis or trauma history
was reported. Matsui et al.[
7] showed that both
fibro-adipose and chondro-osseous components
of a tendon lipoma contains high mobility group
A2-lipoma preferred partner (HMGA2-LPP) fusion
transcript. This situation suggests that HMGA2-
LPP fusion protein induces both fibroadipogenesis
and osteochondrogenesis. Fourth case,[
5] reported
that HMGA2-SETBP1 gene fusion identical
to those found in the ordinary lipomas further
supports the association both pathogenetically and
otherwise between osteochondrolipomas and other
lipoma subtypes (Table
1). These studies advocate
that these tumors are variants of classic lipomas.
Computed tomography is important in the evaluation
of osteochondrolipoma and useful for documenting
the presence of fatty and osseous elements.[
4,
8] In the
present case, CT clearly demonstrated the presence of
surrounding ossification and the association between
the tumor and the adjacent bone (Figure
1). Magnetic
resonance imaging is generally considered to be
the preferred imaging modality for the evaluation
of adipocytic tumors. Ossification, calcification,
and fibrous connective tissue appear as low-signal
intensity areas on all MR pulse sequences.[
8-
10]
In the present case, it was difficult to detect and evaluate the peripheral ossifications by using MRI.
The differential diagnosis should include soft-tissue
chondromas, extraskeletal osteochondromas, myositis
ossificans, ossifying fibromyxoid tumors, chondroid
lipomas, and well-differentiated liposarcomas. Since
an incisional biopsy samples only a part of the lesion,
it can lead to misdiagnosis due to the pleomorphism
of osteochondrolipoma; thus histopathological
examination of the whole tumor following exenteration
is the preferred approach for diagnosis and treatment.
If the lesion is too large or if it has adhesions to
nearby tissues and if the malignancy potential is
high, needle biopsy can be performed before surgery
while the lesion cannot be diagnosed completely and
specifically with needle biopsy or incisional biopsy.
In the second case,[
3] authors reported that excisional
biopsy was performed and the lesion was found to be
benign and contained only benign mature fat cells
(Table
1). Following that operation, they excised the
mass en bloc. Treatment for osteochondroma is not
certain. In the second case,[
3] a uthors i ndicated t hat
en bloc excision was performed. In the third case,[
4]
authors reported that the tumor was marginally excised
(Table
1). In the present case, a total tumor excision
was performed. If the tumor has adhesions between
nearby tissues or is suspected to be malignant, en bloc
excision may be performed.
Table 1: Demographic data of patients and summary of other published reports on osteochondrolipoma
of chest wall
In conclusion, our case represents the fifth
report of a lipoma with bone and cartilaginous
differentiation occurring in chest wall. Given
the fact that lipomas can be further subclassified
according to specific patterns of differentiation,
differential diagnosis may be challenging clinically,
radiologically, and histopathologically. Treatment for
osteochondrolipomas and lipomas is the same. Total
excision should be performed if possible; however,
if the mass has malignancy potential, an incisional
biopsy should be performed first for diagnosis and
then an en bloc excision for treatment.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.