Bone tumour diagnosis; a comparison of roentgenography and histopathology in the diagnosis of bone tumours: a study at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi
Abstract
Bone tumours can either be primary or secondary. The secondary bone tumors are
malignant deposits from other tissues. Primary bone tumours are either benign or malignant.
This study was done to determine what percentage of bone tumour diagnosis made
from radiographs agreed with the histopathological diagnosis. This study also assessed the
usefulness of the various discriminators used in analysing bone tumours on x-ray.
A group of patients whose radiographs and histopathological reports that were
available were used in this study.
Radiographs of the affected bone(s) were reported by me and reviewed with my
supervisor who is a consultant radiologist.
This study was retrospective and covered patients whose radiographs and
histopathology reports were available and they had been presumed to have bone tumours.
78 cases were analysed in this study. 42 cases were found to be malignant on both
radiology and histology. 10 cases were found to be benign on both radiology and histology.
23 (54.8%) of the malignant lesions had the same specific diagnosis on radiology and
histology. 3 (30%) cases of the malignant lesions had the same specific diagnosis on both
radiology and histology. It is recommended therefore that greater cooperation between the
clinician, the radiologist and the pathologist is required in establishing the correct diagnosis.
Citation
Master of Medicine in Diagnostic Radiology, University of Nairobi, 1995Publisher
University of Nairobi, School of Medicine