Open Access
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · Rev Bras Ortop (Sao Paulo) 2023; 58(06): e957-e959
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1722594
Relato de Caso
Oncologia

Fibroma of the Patellar Tendon Sheath: A New Paradigm

Article in several languages: português | English
1   Treinamento específico em Ortopedia, Serviço de Ortopedia, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE, Portugal
,
2   Treinamento específico de Medicina Geral e da Família, USF BRIOSA, Centro de Saúde Norton de Matos, Coimbra, Portugal
,
1   Treinamento específico em Ortopedia, Serviço de Ortopedia, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE, Portugal
,
1   Treinamento específico em Ortopedia, Serviço de Ortopedia, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE, Portugal
,
João Pedro Oliveira
1   Treinamento específico em Ortopedia, Serviço de Ortopedia, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE, Portugal
› Author Affiliations

 

Abstract

The authors present a case of fibroma of the tendon sheath with intra-articular location in the knee, more specifically in the infrapatellar fat; with this specific location, this is the fourth case described of an entity that rarely affects large joints. Clinical and epidemiological aspects, but especially the imaging findings on magnetic resonance imaging scans, are essential for the differential and definitive diagnosis, which was nevertheless established only after a histological study of the excised mass by miniarthrotomy.


Introduction

Fibroma of the tendon sheath (FTS) is a reactive tumor lesion with origin in the synovial membrane of the tendon sheath, benign and rare,[1] first described by Geschickter and Copeland[2] in 1949. It is defined as a slow-growing nodular neoplasm adjacent to the tendon sheath, clinically manifested by a small joint mass or effusion that essentially affects people between 20 and 50 years of age, especially men, and more commonly the joints of the fingers and hand, being relatively rare in large joints.[3] [4] In these, the knee is the most common location, but most commonly associated with the cruciate ligament and posterior capsule, with only three cases described in the literature of tendon sheath tumors emerging from the infrapatellar Hoffa sheath.[5] The authors present a case of a fibroma of the patellar tendon sheath at the intra-articular level.


Case Report

A 39-year-old male physician attended the orthopedics consultation for anterior pain in the left knee, mild and present mainly in the initial phase of symptoms, with an associated soft-tissue mass with about 12 months of evolution and slow growth. He denied any history of previous trauma or previous complaints in this knee. The arc of motion of the knee joint was preserved, with extension up to 0° and flexion up to 130°, with discomfort starting at 90° of flexion. There were no joint effusion of the knee or apparent instabilities. The mass was located in the anterolateral region of the knee, lateral to the patellar tendon, and it was soft, painless on palpation, of hard-elastic consistency, with about 4 cm in its largest axis and 2 cm in width. Analytically, there were no alterations, and, in the sonographic and radiological study of the knee, no alterations were observed as well. A Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan showed a tissue mass attached to the Hoffa pouch in the anterolateral region of the knee anterior to the lateral plate of the tibia and posterolateral to the patellar tendon, with 3.9 cm x 1.9 cm of isointense signal to the muscle on either T1 and T2, with hyperintensity foci and well-defined edges ([Fig. 1]). We raised the diagnostic hypothesis of giant cell tumor (GCT). We chose to perform a marginal resection of the lesion by lateral parapatellar miniarthrotomy, verifying that it was an intracapsular and intra-synovial lesion with a pedicle to the Hoffa pouch, lateral to the anterior tuberosity of the tibia and posterolateral to the patellar tendon. The pedicle was resected, and the lesion was completely excised, and we obtained an oval and irregular fragment measuring 4 cm x 2 cm x 1.5 cm, with a white, bright and lobulated section surface ([Fig. 2]). On the pathological study, we observed that the lesion corresponded mainly to a fibro-hyaline stroma, in which collagen fibers are limited by elongated fibroblasts, monotonous and without atypia, as well as by a neovascular component, occasionally observing a surface coated by synovial epithelium ([Fig. 3]). Thus, the diagnosis of fibroma of the patellar tendon sheath of the knee was established. With ten months of evolution, the patient denies pain or any associated functional limitation, with no signs of local recurrence.

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Fig. 1 Images of the relative isointensity in the sagittal plane on T2 (a), T1 (b) and axial plane on T2 (c).
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Fig. 2 Intraoperative photographs: (a) location and clinical appearance; (b) pediculated lesion before complete excision; (c) macroscopic appearance and measurement of the largest axis, with approximately 4 cm (d) Relatively homogeneous intralesional macroscopic aspect.
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Fig. 3 Photomicrography: (a) proliferation of fibrohyaline stroma; (b) elongated and monotonous fibroblasts; (c) surface coated by synovial epithelium.

Discussion

Fibromas of the tendon sheath mainly involve the joints of the fingers, hand and wrist, and 75% to 82% are found in these locations, most often corresponding to a small, firm, painless and slow-growing nodule dependent on the tendon or its sheath, with a peak incidence in the third and fourth decades of life, and 3 to 5 times more common among men.[6] Although the knee is the most frequently-involved large joint, less than 40 cases have been described, most of them originating from the posterior cruciate ligament or posterior capsule, and, in large joints, the most commonly-described symptoms are pain and palpable mass smaller than 7 cm, in this order of frequency.[5] The case herein presented has most of the clinical and epidemiological characteristics described as more common, except for the location, with only three cases described to date that were dependent on the patellar tendon, and 3, on infrapatellar fat.[5]

The imaging studies with x-ray or axial computed tomography in this type of lesion are normal, and erosive bone changes or soft-tissue changes may rarely be observed in larger lesions.[7] The FTS MRI findings are usually constant on T1, generally showing a well-defined lesion of low signal or isointense to the muscle; however, the T2-weighted images show a great variability of patterns, most commonly a low-intensity signal to the muscle, and the following can also be observed: a high-intensity central zone in a low-intensity matrix, high focal intensity signal, or high-intensity image across the mass.[5] The case herein described, when demonstrating an isointense lesion to the muscle on T1 and relatively isointense also on T2, with hyperintensity foci, led the authors to initially consider it to be a GCT, which is characteristically isointense or with low intensity, either on T1 or T2.[8] In addition to GCT, whose presence in the histological examination of multinucleated giant cells and hemosiderin deposits is fundamental for the diagnosis, FTS has as a differential diagnosis nodular fasciitis.[5] The possible variability on T2 on the MRI makes the differential diagnosis of nodular fasciitis uncertain; however, the fact that it rarely presents an intra-articular location, being associated with a rapidly-growing and more commonly painful mass and presenting older tissue, with more prominent myxoid stroma, with red-cell extravasation and without any vascular pattern on the histological examination differentiate nodular fasciitis from FTS, in which a nodular pattern, sometimes with small slit-like vascular canals and coated with synovial epithelium, is typical.[4] The treatment of choice for these lesions is marginal excision, most often through an open approach.[5] Although Chung and Enzinger[9] reported a recurrence rate of 24%, in large joints, such as the knee, there are no cases described in the literature.[5] It should be noted, however, that given the absence of absolute certainty of complete removal of the lesion in the case herein described, attention is important to exclude recurrence.

In conclusion, this case herein reported reinforces the importance of including FTS in the differential diagnosis of soft-tissue masses at the level of the knee.



Conflito de Interesses

Os autores declaram não haver conflito de interesses.

Free and informed consent

Free and informed consent was obtained from the patient for the publication of the data regarding the case.


Work developed at Orthopedics Service, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE, Portugal.



Endereço para correspondência

João Boavida
Interno de Formação Específica em Ortopedia, Serviço de Ortopedia, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra EPE
Coimbra
Portugal   

Publication History

Received: 17 August 2020

Accepted: 17 September 2020

Article published online:
31 March 2021

© 2021. Sociedade Brasileira de Ortopedia e Traumatologia. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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Fig. 1 Imagens da relativa isointensidade no plano sagital em T2 (a), T1 (b), e plano axial em T2 (c)
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Fig. 2 Fotografias intraoperatórias: (a) localização e aspeto clínico; (b) lesão pediculada antes da sua excisão completa; c) aspecto macroscópico e medição do maior eixo, de aproximadamente 4 cm; d) aspecto macroscópico intralesional relativamente homogêneo.
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Fig. 3 Fotomicrografia: (a) proliferação de estroma fibro-hialino; (b) fibroblastos alongados e monótonos; (c) superfície revestida por epitélio sinovial.
Zoom
Fig. 1 Images of the relative isointensity in the sagittal plane on T2 (a), T1 (b) and axial plane on T2 (c).
Zoom
Fig. 2 Intraoperative photographs: (a) location and clinical appearance; (b) pediculated lesion before complete excision; (c) macroscopic appearance and measurement of the largest axis, with approximately 4 cm (d) Relatively homogeneous intralesional macroscopic aspect.
Zoom
Fig. 3 Photomicrography: (a) proliferation of fibrohyaline stroma; (b) elongated and monotonous fibroblasts; (c) surface coated by synovial epithelium.