Imaging of Soft Tissue Sarcomas

🩺 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.


πŸ–ΌοΈ Imaging Modalities

1️⃣ Radiography

  • Often normal or nonspecific.
  • May show:
    • Soft tissue mass with or without calcifications.
    • Bone erosion or periosteal reaction if adjacent bone involved.

2️⃣ Ultrasound

  • First-line for superficial lesions.
  • Findings:
    • Solid hypoechoic mass with internal vascularity.
    • Useful for guiding biopsy.
  • Limitation: cannot define deep extension.

3️⃣ CT

  • Useful for deep, retroperitoneal, thoracic, pelvic STS.
  • Shows extent, density, calcification, necrosis, adjacent organ involvement.
  • Helpful for lung metastasis evaluation.

4️⃣ 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.

⚑ 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.

🧩 Role of Imaging

  1. Diagnosis & Characterization β†’ MRI features suggest malignancy but biopsy is required.
  2. Local Staging β†’ Tumor size, compartments, fascial planes, neurovascular involvement.
  3. Biopsy Planning β†’ Imaging guides the safest biopsy tract (must be placed along surgical approach).
  4. Follow-up β†’ MRI for local recurrence, CT chest for metastasis (most common site = lung).

🧠 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.

πŸ“Š Benign vs Malignant Soft Tissue Tumors – MRI Features

FeatureBenign TumorsMalignant (Soft Tissue Sarcomas)
SizeUsually < 5 cmOften > 5 cm
MarginsWell-defined, smoothIll-defined, infiltrative
Signal on T1Iso-/hypointense to muscle, homogeneousHypo- to isointense, heterogeneous
Signal on T2/STIRHomogeneous hyperintenseMarkedly hyperintense, heterogeneous with necrosis/hemorrhage
EnhancementHomogeneous, mild to moderateHeterogeneous, irregular, strong
Perilesional edemaMinimal or absentOften present (may mimic inflammation)
Fat plane preservationPreserved (β€œsplit fat sign”)Lost; invasion of fascial planes
Fascial involvementRareFascial tail sign common
Neurovascular encasementAbsentMay be present
Bone involvementRare (pressure erosion)Cortical invasion, destruction
Growth patternSlow, stableRapid, progressive
RecurrenceRare after excisionCommon, 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.

βœ… 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.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *