Ds. Springfield et al., RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN OSTEOFIBROUS DYSPLASIA AND ADAMANTINOMA, Clinical orthopaedics and related research, (309), 1994, pp. 234-244
The records and computer files of 32 patients treated at 1 institution
for ossifying fibroma, fibrous dysplasia, osteofibrous dysplasia-like
adamantinoma, or adamantinoma of the tibia were reviewed. Nineteen pa
tients had their diagnosis changed, either because of a recurrence or
through review of their histology. Six of the 9 patients who had a typ
ical adamantinoma and 6 of the 10 patients who had an osteofibrous dys
plasia-like adamantinoma had a diagnosis of 1 of the benign conditions
before their adamantinoma was recognized. Only 6 patients actually ha
d osteofibrous dysplasia. Three patients required a resection, but onl
y 1 of the other 3 has been observed >5 years. This review suggests th
at many patients with a diagnosis of fibrous dysplasia or osteofibrous
dysplasia of the tibia actually have an adamantinoma, and that osteof
ibrous dysplasia is often a locally aggressive lesion that progresses
until it is widely resected. In addition, osteofibrous dysplasia and a
damantinoma appear to be related, and osteofibrous dysplasia may be a
precursor of adamantinoma.