Abstract
1. Fifty cases of fibrosarcoma from the records of the Bristol Bone Tumour Registry are reviewed. They present further clinical and radiological evidence supporting the concept of fibrosarcoma as a distinctive type of bone tumour.
2. The radiographic appearances have often been those ofan osteolytic lesion totally enclosed by reactive subperiosteal new bone.
3. Included in the group are eleven cases with Paget's osteitis deformans, three cases in which the sarcoma was associated with calcified cartilage and one case that is regarded as a post-irradiation sarcoma.
4. Several clinically differing modes of presentation are described.
5. Fibrosarcoma in bone has often been said to be "central" or "medullary" but because the present series includes tumours with eccentric origin and unilateral cortical destruction this description is inappropriate.
6. The histological differentiation from other fibroblastic lesions is briefly discussed.
7. The five-year and ten-year survival rates were respectively 28 per cent and 1 2 per cent, with an average survival oftwenty-four months in the thirty-six patients who died. Among the long survivors were two patients with Paget's disease.