Paraspinal pseudoneoplasms: a series of 58 consultation cases emphasizing the importance of pathology-radiology correlation.

Hum Pathol

Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, 99505, USA. Electronic address:

Published: September 2020


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Article Abstract

A variety of non-neoplastic diseases of the spine, including herniated/sequestered intervertebral discs, synovial cysts, and degenerative or post-traumatic changes, may present as mass lesions. Over the past several years, we have seen a large number of such paraspinal pseudoneoplasms in consultation, referred out of concern for malignancy on the part of the clinician, pathologist, or both. Herein, we report our experience with these specimens, emphasizing the clinical, radiologic, and histopathological features that allow their confident distinction from various mesenchymal tumors. Fifty-eight cases were identified within our consultation archives, referred in consultation to exclude malignancy and diagnosed as non-neoplastic disease involving the intervertebral disc, ligamentum flavum, or paraspinal soft tissues (2006-2019). Available radiologic studies were reviewed by 2 musculoskeletal radiologists. The histologic features of all cases were re-evaluated. Available clinical records were reviewed. The masses occurred in adults (median age 62 years, range 20-86 years) with a male predominance (35 males and 23 females). Sites included lumbar spine (N = 33), thoracic spine (N = 15), cervical spine (N = 6), paraspinal region (N = 3), and sacral spine (N = 1). In 44 cases (76%), the referring pathologist regarded the specimen as representing a benign or malignant neoplasm, either primary or metastatic. Fifteen cases (26%) were sent for second opinion at the request of the treating clinician, following an initial malignant diagnosis. Advanced imaging studies were available for re-review in 37 cases (64%) and showed herniated/extruded disc (N = 17), compression fracture (N = 9), synovial cyst (N = 8), and degenerative joint disease (N = 7). Multiple radiologic findings were seen in 9 patients. Histologically, the specimens showed a spectrum of often florid reactive changes involving degenerating disc material, ligamentum flavum, and bone. Awareness that non-neoplastic spinal processes may form pseudoneoplastic mass lesions, and careful clinical-radiologic-pathologic correlation should allow their confident distinction from potential morphologic mimics.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.humpath.2020.07.012DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • A variety of non-cancerous conditions, such as herniated discs and synovial cysts, can mimic tumors in the spine, causing concern among doctors about the possibility of cancer.
  • The study reviewed 58 cases diagnosed as non-neoplastic diseases from 2006 to 2019, primarily in older adults, with a significant number initially misidentified as tumors by pathologists.
  • Imaging studies and histological evaluations helped differentiate these masses from actual tumors, underscoring the importance of recognizing these benign conditions to avoid unnecessary treatment.
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