Challenges in Histologic Diagnosis of Nonchordomatous Lesions of the Clivus

Nonchordomatous clival lesions are rare and represent a wide range of different benign and malignant pathologies. For an accurate and specific final diagnosis, biopsy procedures and/or resections followed by histologic examination are mandatory. To illustrate the challenges in obtaining a final hist...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:JAMA otolaryngology-- head & neck surgery Vol. 141; no. 8; p. 745
Main Authors: Kristin, Julia, Schipper, Jörg H, Jalkhi, Muhammad, Zahnert, Thomas, Wagenmann, Martin
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 01-08-2015
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Summary:Nonchordomatous clival lesions are rare and represent a wide range of different benign and malignant pathologies. For an accurate and specific final diagnosis, biopsy procedures and/or resections followed by histologic examination are mandatory. To illustrate the challenges in obtaining a final histologic diagnosis in patients with various types of clival lesions. We performed a retrospective analysis of medical records of 24 patients who underwent endonasal endoscopic biopsy of the clivus between February 1, 2005, and June 1, 2013, in 2 medical university hospitals. Analysis was conducted between January 1 and August 15, 2014. All patients underwent endoscopic biopsy of the clivus. The number of biopsies performed to establish a diagnosis in clival lesions and the problems encountered when analyzing the radiologic findings and histologic results. In 14 of 24 patients (58%), a conclusive histologic diagnosis of the nonchordomatous clival lesion could be determined. Despite up to 3 endonasal endoscopic biopsies, the histologic result could not be clearly specified in the remaining 10 patients (42%). No major complications occurred. Treatment based on the testing results included endonasal endoscopic surgery, radiotherapy or radiochemotherapy, and/or follow-up examination. Challenges can occur in the radiologic evaluation and pathologic differentiation of diverse bone lesions with overlapping morphologic features as well as in the differentiation between neoplastic, reactive, inflammatory, and metabolic bone lesions and developmental disorders. Despite more than 1 biopsy, histologic classification will not always lead to a definitive diagnosis. In such cases, an interdisciplinary team should decide whether additional biopsies should be performed or whether clinical, endoscopic, and radiologic controls are sufficient.
ISSN:2168-619X
DOI:10.1001/jamaoto.2015.1091