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Imaging Diagnosis of Thoracic Elastofibroma Dorsi. | LitMetric

Imaging Diagnosis of Thoracic Elastofibroma Dorsi.

J Comput Assist Tomogr

From the Division of Thoracic Imaging, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Elastofibroma dorsi (ED) is a rare benign tumor often found accidentally during thoracic imaging, and this study aims to identify its typical imaging features and assess the risk of it being confused with cancer.
  • The researchers reviewed 409 suspected ED cases over 12 years, focusing on imaging techniques like CT and MRI, noting key characteristics such as tumor location and presence of fat within the lesions.
  • Findings showed that ED typically appears near the scapular tip and deep to the serratus anterior, with a significant percentage of cases showing interspersed fat, allowing for strong diagnostic confidence which reduces the need for additional testing.

Article Abstract

Objective: Elastofibroma dorsi (ED) is an uncommon benign tumor that is commonly incidentally discovered on thoracic imaging and at times misinterpreted as a more aggressive lesion. The objective of the study is to characterize the typical cross-sectional imaging findings of elastofibroma dorsi and quantify the risk of masquerading malignancy.

Methods: Retrospective search of radiology and pathology reports over a 12-year period identified 409 cases of suspected ED. Pertinent imaging was reviewed with a focus on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), specifically assessing lesion location, presence of interspersed fat, and appearances on follow-up.

Results: Typical imaging appearances of 310 ED, including 10% with pathologic confirmation, were that of a mass deep to the serratus anterior (98%) and near the scapular tip (98%). Intralesional interspersed fat was present in 87% of cases imaged with CT and in 90% of cases imaged with MRI. In the 43 cases imaged with both modalities, 8 (19%) did not have interspersed fat on CT, but 7 (88%) of these did have interspersed fat on MRI. Twelve tumors (benign and malignant) were included, of which only 17% were deep to serratus anterior and 25% were at the scapular tip, P = 0.0001 and P < 0.0001 versus ED. Only a single tumor contained interspersed fat, P < 0.001 versus ED, which had benign pathology on biopsy.

Conclusions: Elastofibroma dorsi can be diagnosed with a high degree of certainty in the presence of classic location and imaging characteristics, obviating the need for further imaging or biopsy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/RCT.0000000000001626DOI Listing

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