π©Ί Introduction
Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) are a heterogeneous group of malignant mesenchymal tumors. Imaging plays a crucial role in detection, characterization, local staging, biopsy planning, and treatment follow-up.
πΌοΈ Imaging Modalities
1οΈβ£ Radiography
- Often normal or nonspecific.
- May show:
- Soft tissue mass with or without calcifications.
- Bone erosion or periosteal reaction if adjacent bone involved.
2οΈβ£ Ultrasound
- First-line for superficial lesions.
- Findings:
- Solid hypoechoic mass with internal vascularity.
- Useful for guiding biopsy.
- Limitation: cannot define deep extension.
3οΈβ£ CT
- Useful for deep, retroperitoneal, thoracic, pelvic STS.
- Shows extent, density, calcification, necrosis, adjacent organ involvement.
- Helpful for lung metastasis evaluation.
4οΈβ£ MRI (modality of choice)
- Gold standard for local staging.
- Key findings:
- Large, heterogeneous soft tissue mass.
- T1: Iso- to hypointense to muscle.
- T2: Hyperintense, often heterogeneous.
- STIR/T2 fat sat: Highlights edema and extent.
- Post-contrast: Heterogeneous enhancement, necrotic/cystic areas.
- Fascial plane involvement, neurovascular encasement, skip lesions.
β‘ Key MRI Signs
- Split fat sign β preserved fat rim around benign lesions; often lost in sarcomas.
- Fascial tail sign β enhancing fascial extensions; suggests aggressive nature.
- Perilesional edema β can be seen in sarcomas but also in benign aggressive lesions.
π§© Role of Imaging
- Diagnosis & Characterization β MRI features suggest malignancy but biopsy is required.
- Local Staging β Tumor size, compartments, fascial planes, neurovascular involvement.
- Biopsy Planning β Imaging guides the safest biopsy tract (must be placed along surgical approach).
- Follow-up β MRI for local recurrence, CT chest for metastasis (most common site = lung).
π§ Teaching Pearls
- MRI is the modality of choice for local staging.
- Always report: size, margins, compartments, neurovascular involvement, bone invasion, skip lesions.
- Chest CT is mandatory for staging (lung mets).
- Imaging + biopsy = final diagnosis.
π Benign vs Malignant Soft Tissue Tumors β MRI Features
Feature | Benign Tumors | Malignant (Soft Tissue Sarcomas) |
---|---|---|
Size | Usually < 5 cm | Often > 5 cm |
Margins | Well-defined, smooth | Ill-defined, infiltrative |
Signal on T1 | Iso-/hypointense to muscle, homogeneous | Hypo- to isointense, heterogeneous |
Signal on T2/STIR | Homogeneous hyperintense | Markedly hyperintense, heterogeneous with necrosis/hemorrhage |
Enhancement | Homogeneous, mild to moderate | Heterogeneous, irregular, strong |
Perilesional edema | Minimal or absent | Often present (may mimic inflammation) |
Fat plane preservation | Preserved (βsplit fat signβ) | Lost; invasion of fascial planes |
Fascial involvement | Rare | Fascial tail sign common |
Neurovascular encasement | Absent | May be present |
Bone involvement | Rare (pressure erosion) | Cortical invasion, destruction |
Growth pattern | Slow, stable | Rapid, progressive |
Recurrence | Rare after excision | Common, needs follow-up |
- Size > 5 cm, deep location, heterogeneous enhancement, and fascial/neurovascular invasion strongly suggest sarcoma.
- Benign lesions (e.g., lipoma, hemangioma, neurogenic tumors) usually have smooth margins and respect fascial planes.
- Always combine MRI features with clinical findings + biopsy for definitive diagnosis.
β Conclusion
Soft tissue sarcomas are rare but aggressive tumors. MRI provides excellent local staging, CT complements for thoracic and retroperitoneal evaluation, and both are essential for management planning. Radiologists play a key role in the diagnosis-to-treatment pathway.