Rheumatoid Pseudocyst (Geode) of the Femoral Neck Without Apparent Joint Involvement

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\>»*i*c*»üj^h«< %Χ»*1»#Ί*#Ι 1» Rheumatoid Pseudocyst (Geode) of the Femoral Neck Without Apparent Joint Involvement BERNARD F. MORREY, M.D., Department of Orthopedics Typically, rheumatoid cysts are associated with obvious joint involvement and are located in the subchondral portion of the adjacent joint. Giant pseudocysts (geodes) are uncommon and are characteristically associated with extensive joint destruction. The patient described in this report had a giant pseudocyst of the femoral neck but no joint involvement. To the best of my knowledge, this is the first report of such a manifestation of a giant pseudocyst. As such, it posed a somewhat difficult diagnostic problem. Subchondral erosions and cyst formation are common and, in fact, typical of rheumatoid arthritis. 1 " 4 Dahlin 5 made a useful distinction between cysts that occur incidentally in association with a disease, such as in pigmented villonodular synovitis, and those that are seen as a direct result of primary joint involvement with a disease, as in osteoarthritis, 6 " 9 hemophilia, 10 or rheumatoid arthritis. 3 ' 11 ' 12 Giant pseudocysts have also occurred in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, but only infrequently. 2,13-17 A characteristic feature of this type of lesion is the invariable association with severe joint destruction. 13,16,18 This report describes a patient with a giant rheumatoid pseudocyst of the femoral neck without joint involvement. Documentation of this rare manifestation is of value because the entity has not been recognized previously and the diagnosis may be difficult to determine. REPORT OF CASE A 66-year-old active man with seropositive (rheumatoid factor less than 1:20) rheumatoid arthritis Address correspondence to Dr. B. F. Morrey, Department of Orthopedics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905. had had typical involvement of the knees that necessitated bilateral knee replacement 2 and 3 years previously. At the time of operation, the pathologic appearance of the synovium was interpreted as "mild rheumatoid synovitis." In October 1984, he came to the Mayo Clinic because of pain in the left hip that intensified with activity. He had no stiffness or fibrocystic features. The patient indicated that he had had an increase of pain with activity during the past several weeks, which was relieved by rest but considerably limited his daily activities. Examination showed that the patient had a Trendelenburg gait. The hip motion was normal. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (Westergren method) was 76 mm in 1 hour (normal, 0 to 22 mm in 1 hour). Roentgenograms of the pelvis revealed extensive localized radiolucencies of both femoral necks, but the articular surfaces appeared to be intact (Fig. 1). No joint narrowing or subchondral erosion or cyst formation was noted on the plain films. The diagnosis of a pathologic fracture through a probable rheumatoid pseudocyst was considered, and a technetium-99m bone scan was obtained to exclude or demonstrate articular involvement. This study disclosed increased uptake in the femoral neck but not in the joint itself (Fig. 2). Because the patient had no signs or symptoms of arthritis, a bone grafting and internal fixation procedure was planned. The day Mayo Clin Proc 62:407-411, 1987 407

408 PSEUDOCYST OF THE FEMORAL NECK Mayo Clin Proc, May 1987, Vol 62 Fig. 1. Anteroposterior roentgenogram of pelvis of active 66-year-old man with rheumatoid arthritis. The joint space of both hips is preserved. Note large, well-circumscribed, lytic areas in femoral neck and subtle suggestion of presence of a lesion in subchondral region (arrow). Pain was present in left groin. before operation, the pain in the left hip increased abruptly after the patient twisted his hip while getting out of the shower. At the time of operation, the presence of gross motion at the fracture site, the extent of the cyst, the age of the patient, and the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis prompted the decision to proceed with a conventional cemented hip replacement. The resected specimen confirmed the extensive involvement in the femoral neck and also of the femoral head. The articular cartilage, however, appeared normal (Fig. 3). No evidence was found of synovitis or ganglion formation. 19 The lesion was thought to be entirely intraosseous although the process could have begun by synovial erosion initiated at the articular margin (Fig. 3). The specimen was lined by bone or slightly inflammatory fibrous tissue. Histologie examination of the content of the specimen revealed nonspecific inflammatory fibrous tissue (Fig. 4). The joint synovium was without evidence of rheumatoid arthritis. One year postoperatively, the patient was free of pain in the left hip. Roentgenograms showed that the lesion in the right hip had not progressed. DISCUSSION Although subchondral cyst formation is typical in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, the development of large pseudocysts is uncommon, and the occurrence of a pseudocyst without adjacent joint involvement has not been reported previously to the best of my knowledge. In the patient described in this article, the possibility of a benign bone tumor was considered, as has been previously reported. 12,15 The bilateral involvement in this patient and also the underlying diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis made the presence of a tumor unlikely. Furthermore, the site of the lesion and the age of the patient supported a nontumor cause of the pain. Pigmented villonodular synovitis is rare in this age group and is typically associated with involve-

Mayo Clin Proc, May 1987, Vol 62 PSEUDOCYST OF THE FEMORAL NECK 409 Fig. 2. Posteroanterior technetium-99m bone scan (image reversed from Figure 1), revealing increased uptake at inferior medial neck of left femur but not in the joint itself or in subchondral region of femoral head. ment of both sides of the joint and with joint narrowing. Clinically, the joint is painful and motion is restricted. 2,5 None of these features was present in this patient. Cystic lesions are sometimes present in patients with degenerative joint disease. 6 " 9 The location of such cysts associated with degenerative joint disease is generally under the weight-bearing surface. The cyst is surrounded by a sclerotic margin, and the patient usually has symptoms of arthritis and evidence of nonuniform joint narrowing. These features, which distinguish cysts in patients with degenerative arthritis from those in patients with an underlying rheumatoid arthritis, were not present in this patient. The existence of a primary cyst of the femoral neck has likewise been reported. 20 Although the cause is unclear, it does not seem to be associated with arthritis. There seems little doubt that the lesions reported in this case are giant rheumatoid pseudocysts of the femoral head and neck. Such cysts (with joint involvement) have been previously reported and are found in active patients with rheumatoid arthritis, 11 similar to the active 66-year-old man in this report. Although these large cystic lesions are well known to rheumatologists and radiologists, only a single report has been published in the orthopedic literature. Colton and Darby 13 described two cases that involved the femoral neck and caused severe joint destruction that necessitated replacement with endoprostheses. The pathologic characteristics of the lesion are not those of a true cyst. Thus, the term "pseudocyst" or geode has been recommended. 1,14 ' 17 ' 18,21 The histologic features of a pseudocyst can be distinguished from those of the more typical

410 PSEUDOCYST OF THE FEMORAL NECK Mayo Clin Proc, May 1987, Vol 62 Fig. 3. Surgical specimen, demonstrating large erosive lesion from margin of articular cartilage (arrows) continuous into femoral neck. Note normal appearance of articular cartilage. Fig. 4. Histologic preparation, showing fibrous tissue infiltrated by round cells and covered by a mass of fibrin. (Hematoxylin and eosin; xl60.) subchondral erosion associated with rheumatoid arthritis. These smaller subchondral erosions are thought to occur from synovial invasion of the subchondral bone and to represent synovial or pannus invasion. 21,22 Histologie analysis of a pseudocyst will disclose nonspecific fibrous tissue, 13 as was demonstrated in the case described herein. Because the histologic appearance is not diagnostic of the cause of a pseudocyst, the clinical course usually is the most important feature in establishing the diagnosis. 17 ' 21,22 In this setting, extensive joint involvement has generally been a consistent feature in patients with geode formation.1,12'13'17'18'21,22 Consequently, diagnosing a pseudocyst becomes difficult when joint or synovial involvement is minimal or absent. 14 Recognition of the possibility of the occurrence of a pseudocyst without joint involvement will facilitate definitive treatment without the need for

Mayo Clin Proc, May 1987, Vol 62 PSEUDOCYST OF THE FEMORAL NECK 411 extensive and expensive studies to verify the diagnosis. CONCLUSION This case is of interest because it is a welldocumented instance of a patient with rheumatoid arthritis who had large pseudocysts in both femoral necks but no articular or synovial involvement. Knowledge of this manifestation of pseudocysts should be of value in distinguishing this condition from other entities and in avoiding extensive and unnecessary studies. Examination of the opposite hip for a similar process is appropriate in the consideration of a bone grafting and fixation procedure. ACKNOWLEDGMENT J. Aidan Carney, M.D., prepared and interpreted the gross and microscopic pathologic material for this case. REFERENCES 1. Cruickshank B, Macleod JG, Shearer WS: Subarticular pseudocysts in rheumatoid arthritis. J Fac Radiologists 5:218-226,1954 2. Hollander JL: Arthritis and Allied Conditions: A Textbook of Rheumatism. Sixth edition. Philadelphia, Lea & Febiger, 1960 3. Soila P: The causal relations of rheumatoid disintegration of juxta-articular bone trabeculae: a radiographic study. Acta Rheum Scand 9:231-236,1963 4. Greenfield GB: Radiology of Bone Diseases. Second edition. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1975 5. Dahlin DC: Bone Tumors: General Aspects and Data on 6,221 Cases. Third edition. Springfield, Illinois, Charles C Thomas, Publisher, 1978 6. Eggers GWN, Evans EB, Blumel J, Nowlin DH, Butler JK: Cystic change in the iliac acetabulum. J Bone Joint Surg [Am] 45:669-686; 722,1963 7. Freund E: The pathological significance of intra-articular pressure. Edinburgh Med J 47:192-203,1940 8. Landells JW: The bone cysts of osteoarthritis. J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 35:643-649,1953 9. Rhaney K, Lamb DW: The cysts of osteoarthritis of the hip: a radiological and pathological study. J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 37:663-675,1955 10. Middlemiss JH, Raper AB: Skeletal changes in the haemoglobinopathies. J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 48:693-702, 1966 11. Castello BA, El Sallab RA, Scott JT: Physical activity, cystic erosions, and osteoporosis in rheumatoid arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 24:522-526, 1965 12. Lloyd KN, Agarwal A, Rees D: Penetrating subarticular erosions in the elbow in rheumatoid arthritis. Rheumatol Phys Med 11:180-185,1971 13. Colton CL, Darby AJ: Giant granulomatous lesions of the femoral head and neck in rheumatoid arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 29:626-633,1970 14. Ginsberg MH, Genant HK, Yü TF, McCarty DJ: Rheumatoid nodulosis: an unusual variant of rheumatoid disease. Arthritis Rheum 18:49-58,1975 15. Hunder GG, Ward LE, Ivins JC: Rheumatoid granulomatous lesion simulating malignancy in the head and neck of the femur. Mayo Clin Proc 40:766-770,1965 16. Magyar E, Talerman A, Feher M, Wouters HW: Giant bone cysts in rheumatoid arthritis. J Bone Joint Surg [Br] 56:121-129,1974 17. Resnick D, Niwayama G, Coutts RD: Subchondral cysts (geodes) in arthritic disorders: pathologic and radiographic appearance of the hip joint. AJR 128:799-806, 1977 18. Rennell C, Mainzer F, Multz CV, Genant HK: Subchondral pseudocysts in rheumatoid arthritis. AJR 129:1069-1072,1977 19. McBeath AA, Neidhart DA: Acetabular cyst with communicating ganglion: a case report. J Bone Joint Surg [Am] 58:267-269, 1976 20. Pitt MJ, Graham AR, Shipman JH, Birkby W: Herniation pit of the femoral neck. AJR 138:1115-1121,1982 21. Jayson MIV, Rubenstein D, Dixon AStJ: Intra-articular pressure and rheumatoid geodes (bone 'cysts'). Ann Rheum Dis 29:496-502,1970 22. Magyar E, Talerman A, Feher M, Wouters HW: The pathogenesis of the subchondral pseudocysts in rheumatoid arthritis. Clin Orthop 100:341-344, 1974