CASE 15020 Published on 06.12.2017

Bladder chondroma: a rare case of bilateral loin pain in an adult patient

Section

Uroradiology & genital male imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Dr. Shane Crilly, Department of Urology, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, WA 6004, Dr. Fionn Coughlan, Department of Urology, Royal Perth Hospital

Royal Perth Hospital,Royal Perth Hospital; Welllington Street 6004 Perth; Email:shanecrilly@rcsi.ie
Patient

65 years, female

Categories
Area of Interest Genital / Reproductive system male, Abdomen ; Imaging Technique Ultrasound, CT-High Resolution
Clinical History
A 65-year-old lady presented to her general practitioner with a 6 month history of intermittent bilateral flank tenderness in association with dysuria/lower urinary tract symptoms. She underwent full history, examination and uro-gynaecological work up of her lower urinary tract symptoms.
Imaging Findings
She underwent ultrasonographic imaging of her bladder and lower urinary tract which identified a 15mm submucosal bladder wall mass abutting the right vesicoureteral junction. There was no overt fluid signal or vascularity with in the mass lesion. It was thought unlikely to represent a urethrocele and a transitional cell carcinoma was thought most likely.
Discussion
Background: Bladder wall chondromas are rare entities, with 5 cases reported in the medical literature to date. Chondromas are cartilaginous lesions of mesenchymal origin demonstrating slow growth. They have no potential for malignant transformation.[1]

Extraskeletal presentation of chondromas:
Background: Extraskeletal chondromas occur in 3 variants: (a) as nodules of synovial chondromatosis, (b) as a solitary lesion in association with articulations (c) an isolated cartilagenous lesion in the soft tissues. [2] Types b and c histologically exhibit characteristics which often cause unnecessary worry to the pathologist, with features suggestive of chondrosarcoma, however, the diagnosis is usually refined to that of extra skeletal chondroma. Metastasis are exceedingly rare.

Clinical perspective: Extraskeletal chondromas are exceedingly rare, affecting the sexes equally in between the ages of 40-70 years. [3] Classically, bladder wall chondromas present with abdominal pain, but, can have overlapping lower urinary tract symptoms and dysuria. The main differential diagnosis that must be excluded is transitional cell carcinoma and chondrosarcoma. Transitional cell carcinoma is difficult to differentiate from chondroma sonographically and usually requires additional imaging. The presence of bladder wall muscular invasion is suggestive, but, not confirmatory of transitional cell carcinoma/chondrosarcoma as is increased vascularity. Histological diagnosis is the mainstay in terms of differentiation between bladder lesions.

Imaging perspective: As discussed previously imaging findings in bladder wall chondromas tends to be suggestive of an exophytic bladder wall mass with roughly homogenous echogeneity with no areas of cystic degeneration/fluid. Imaging findings are indistinguishable from bladder wall TCC and cystoscopic investigation is necessary to diagnose with certainty.

Outcome: The natural history of untreated bladder wall chondromas is poorly understood due to paucity of literature on the subject. However, patients presenting with obstructive lower urinary tract symptoms with a putative bladder wall chondroma should be considered for at least partial surgical resection. In this patients case resection was abandoned during due to proximity to the limit of the bladder wall. The patient represented with dysuria approximately 1 week post-operatively and was admitted for antibiotic treatment of putative cystitis (figure 1b). Figure 1c demonstrates stable appearances of residual chondroma post-operatively.

Teaching points: Bladder chondromas are a vanishingly rare cause of lower urinary tract symptoms, obstructive uropathy and bladder mass lesions. The are radiologically seen as exophytic bladder wall mass lesions with a homogenous echogenicity with poor vascularity. Bladder chondroma must considered as a rare differential diagnosis for transitional cell carcinoma/urothelial carcinoma of the bladder.
Differential Diagnosis List
Bladder wall chondroma
Transitional cell carcinoma
Urethrocele
Chondrosarcoma
Final Diagnosis
Bladder wall chondroma
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/15020
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.15020
ISSN: 1563-4086
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