Abstract
Due to a lack of routine, there is often uncertainty regarding diagnostics of tumours around the knee joint. This study aimed to provide knowledge about the frequency, distribution and diagnostic algorithm of different bone and soft tissue tumour entities of the knee at a large referral university hospital in Germany. Retrospective, longitudinal, single-centre study that reviewed adult patients from 2010 until 2020 with a suspected tumours diagnosis around the knee at a university cancer centre. Inclusion criteria were adults with true bone or soft-tissue tumours in the knee joint and in its adjacent compartments. Suspected diagnosis, histological tumour entity, localization and its surgical treatment by biopsy, resection, osteosynthesis or tumour endoprosthesis were investigated. A total number of 310 adult patients were included with a mean age of 54.2 ± 18.8 years. In total 160 (51.6%) soft-tissue tumours (69/43.1% benign; 74/46.2% malignant; 17/10.6% intermediate), 92 (29.6%) primary bone tumours (46/50% benign; 39/42.3% malignant; 7/7.6% intermediate), 36 (11.6%) metastases and 22 (7.1%) lymphomas were detected. 171 (55.1%) tumours were classified as malignant. Suspected diagnosis was matched with histology in 74.5% (231/310) of all cases. In 6 cases a primarily suspected benign diagnosis turned out to be malignant. The majority of primary bone tumours was cartilage derived (63.1%;58/92) and located in the distal 2/3 of the femur, whereas intracapsular tumours of the knee joint were rare (13.0%). Soft-tissue tumours were located primarily in the middle third of the thigh (36.8%). The MRI was the diagnostic tool of choice in 98.1% of soft tissue tumours and 82.6% bone tumours. Awareness is crucial for detecting rare and malignant tumours around the knee, with adipocytic tumours being the most common soft tissue tumour and chondrogenic tumours as the most prevalent malignant bone tumour. Accurate diagnosis of bone tumours necessitates radiographs and frequently an additional MRI scan, while soft tissue tumours require mandatory MRI scans. Incorrectly diagnosing a tumour can have severe consequences, emphasizing the need for histological confirmation in all cases. Additionally, malignant tumours within joint capsules in adults are infrequent.
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