Purpose
The aim of this study is to describe the procedure technique, clinical and imaging outcomes of patients treated with radiofrequency
ablation for chondroblastoma.
Materials and methods
Four patients (female/male, 3:1; mean age, 13 years; age range; 9–16 years) underwent the procedure. All had pre-operative
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and symptomatic, biopsy-proven chondroblastomas (two proximal femur, two proximal tibia).
The lesion size ranged from 1.5 to 2.5 cm in maximal dimension (mean size, 1.8 cm). Bone access was gained with a Bonopty
biopsy needle system (mean number of radiofrequency needle placements, 5; mean ablation time, 31 min).
Results
Clinical and MRI follow-up was available in all cases (mean, 12.25 months; range, 5–18 months). All patients reported resolution
of symptoms at 2–6 weeks post ablation. At their most recent clinical follow-up, three patients remained completely asymptomatic
with full return to normal activities and one patient had minor local discomfort (different pain pattern) that was not limiting
activity. All four patients’ follow-up MRI studies demonstrated resolution of the oedema pattern around the lesion and temporal
evolution of the internal signal characteristics with fatty replacement.
Conclusion
Radiofrequency ablation for chondroblastoma provides an alternative to surgical curettage, and we have demonstrated both a
clinical improvement in symptoms and the follow-up MRI appearances.
Keywords Chondroblastoma - Radio-frequency ablation - Magnetic resonance imaging