Primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine: an analysis of imaging manifestations and clinicopathological findings

Insights Imaging. 2022 Dec 15;13(1):195. doi: 10.1186/s13244-022-01336-y.

Abstract

Background: Primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine is extremely rare and lacks specific clinical symptoms. This study investigated the imaging manifestations and clinicopathological findings of primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine, aiming to improve the radiologists' understanding of the disease and reduce misdiagnoses.

Methods: The clinical, imaging, and pathological manifestations in eleven patients with pathologically confirmed primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine were retrospectively analyzed. The imaging features analyzed included lesion location, shape, border, size, and density/intensity, and adjacent bone destruction status, residual bone trabeculae, vertebral compression, and contrast enhancement.

Results: The patients' primary clinical symptom was usually focal pain. Primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine was mostly a solitary lesion and tended to occur in the posterior elements. The tumors had a lobulated shape with osteolytic bone destruction, ill-defined borders, and could involve multiple segments. Computed tomography (CT) examination showed isodense masses. Six patients showed residual bone trabeculae. Two patients had miscellany T2-weighted imaging (T2WI) signals, while the tumor and spinal cord of the remaining patients were isointense on T1-weighted imaging (T1WI) and T2WI. Among the seven patients who underwent contrast-enhanced scanning, six displayed homogeneous enhancement. Eight patients underwent gross-total tumor resection with no recurrence.

Conclusions: Primary leiomyosarcoma of the spine tends to be a solitary lesion in the posterior elements and appears as a lobulated mass with osteolytic bone destruction and an ill-defined border. The tumor and spinal cord can be isointense on T1WI and T2WI. Contrast-enhanced scanning displays homogeneous enhancement. The lesion tends not to recur after surgical gross-total tumor resection.

Keywords: Computed tomography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Spine.