DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING IN CANCER

Aspecte imagistice în fracturile vertebrale tumorale versus osteoporotice

Imaging features of tumor-related versus osteoporotic vertebral fractures

Data publicării: 03 Iunie 2026
Data primire articol: 14 Mai 2026
Data acceptare articol: 25 Mai 2026
Editorial Group: MEDICHUB MEDIA
10.26416/OnHe.75.2.2026
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Abstract

Vertebral collapse after minor trauma in elderly osteoporotic patients can be difficult to distinguish from vertebral tumor fracture. We present the case of a 74-year-old female patient with lower back pain and functional impairment. The initial differential diagnosis included an osteoporotic vertebral fracture. CT and MRI examination revealed a tumor- related vertebral compression fracture at L1 level. The histopathological diagnosis was micronodular IgG kappa multiple myeloma. Systemic chemotherapy and lumbar radiotherapy were initiated. Imaging was essential for evaluating vertebral morphology and characterizing the lesion, as well as for guiding the therapeutic management. 



Keywords
vertebral fractureCTMRI

Rezumat

Tasările vertebrale osteoporotice după o traumă minoră la pacienții vârstnici pot fi greu de diferențiat de fracturile tumorale vertebrale. Prezentăm cazul unei paciente de 74 de ani, cu durere lombară și impotență funcțională. Diagnosticul diferențial inițial a inclus tasarea vertebrală osteoporotică. Examinările CT și IRM au evidențiat o tasare vertebrală tumorală la nivelul L1. Diagnosticul histopatologic a fost de mielom multiplu micronodular cu IgG kappa. S-a instituit tratament chimioterapic, alături de radioterapie lombară. Evaluarea imagistică a fost esențială în evaluarea morfologiei vertebrale și caracterizarea leziunii, precum și în ghidarea terapiei. 

Cuvinte Cheie
fractură vertebralăCTIRM

Clinical history

A 74-year-old female patient with no significant medical history presented to our hospital (Fundeni Clinical Institute, Bucharest, Romania) with gradually increasing low back pain and functional impairment for one month.

Imaging findings

Non enhanced CT imaging demonstrated a compression fracture of L1 secondary to an osteolytic lesion involving the entire vertebral body, with cortical interruption (Figure 1 a, b). MRI of the lumbar spine revealed an L1 vertebral expansile mass, hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on STIR sequen­ces (Figure 1 c, d). Following contrast administration, the lesion showed intense, homogeneous enhancement, extending to the paravertebral and epidural space and posterior elements (Figure 1 e, f); additional lesions were identified in other lumbar and lower thoracic vertebrae. The findings were consistent with a tumoral fracture.

Discussion

The main differential diagnosis in our patient was an osteoporotic vertebral fracture, given her age and low-energy onset of symptoms. These are common in elderly patients, and typically involve multiple vertebral levels at onset(1).

Unlike malignant fractures, compression in osteoporotic fractures is usually symmetric on frontal views, whereas focal endplate fractures, as in this case (Figure 1b), should raise concern(2). On CT and MRI, in acute osteoporotic fractures, fracture lines may be visible within the vertebral body or cortical bone, but there is no bone destruction (Figure 2) as seen in malignant fractures(3,4). Retropulsion of the posterosuperior or inferoposterior vertebral corner into the spinal canal is a sign of benignity, and the posterior vertebral elements are typically preserved in osteoporotic fractures(5,6). Intravertebral vacuum phenomenon (“vacuum cleft sign”) is almost pathognomonic for a benign fracture (Figure 3), and results from gas (mainly nitrogen) accumulating in the fracture line due to negative pressure, especially during spinal hyperextension(2,7).

Tumoral fractures are often associated with paravertebral or epidural masses, indicating direct tumor extension; on axial images, the ventral extradural space may appear bilobed (“curtain sign”) – Figure 1f(4,6).

Bone marrow contains 40-80% fat, appearing hyperintense on T1-weighted images(8). In chronic osteoporotic fractures (>3 months), T1 hyperintensity is usually preserved(4,6). In recent osteoporotic fractures, vertebral edema appears as low T1 and high T2 signal beneath the collapsed plateau, with indistinct margins and gradually decreasing intensity away from the fracture line(2,9).

Bone tumor infiltration appears as low signal on T1-weighted images, equal to or lower than that of the intervertebral disc or paravertebral muscles(10). On fluid-sensitive sequences, marrow is moderately to markedly hyperintense. Tumor-related fractures show heterogeneous T1/T2 signal, may enhance post-contrast, and often extend beyond the fracture site(2,4,6).

Figure 1. Non-enhanced CT in sagittal (a) and coronal plane (b) reconstructions; T1 weighted (c) and STIR (d) in sagittal plane; T1 Fat Sat in sagittal (e) and axial plane (f) after contrast material i.v. injection: expansile tissue mass which causes a L1 vertebral collapse (arrows) with a convex posterior wall, mass effect and compression on the medullary cone; multiple tumoral involvement of other thoracic and lumbar vertebrae (arrow heads)
Figure 1. Non-enhanced CT in sagittal (a) and coronal plane (b) reconstructions; T1 weighted (c) and STIR (d) in sagittal plane; T1 Fat Sat in sagittal (e) and axial plane (f) after contrast material i.v. injection: expansile tissue mass which causes a L1 vertebral collapse (arrows) with a convex posterior wall, mass effect and compression on the medullary cone; multiple tumoral involvement of other thoracic and lumbar vertebrae (arrow heads)

 

Figure 2. Osteoporotic fractures (white arrows): MRI evaluation of the upper lumbar spine in T1 and STIR weighted sequence; note the T1 hyposignal and T2 hypersignal into the vertebral body due to intraspongious edema and the biconcave aspect of the osteoporotic lumbar vertebrae
Figure 2. Osteoporotic fractures (white arrows): MRI evaluation of the upper lumbar spine in T1 and STIR weighted sequence; note the T1 hyposignal and T2 hypersignal into the vertebral body due to intraspongious edema and the biconcave aspect of the osteoporotic lumbar vertebrae

 

Figure 3. Vacuum cleft – presence of air (white arrow) into an osteoporotic lumbar fracture. CT evaluation in bone window, sagittal plane reconstruction
Figure 3. Vacuum cleft – presence of air (white arrow) into an osteoporotic lumbar fracture. CT evaluation in bone window, sagittal plane reconstruction

 

Hypointense band on all sequences indicates the fracture line in osteoporotic vertebrae. The “fluid sign” (T1 hypointense, T2 hyperintense focal, linear, or triangular area) appears in acute fractures, reflecting fluid replacing air in the vacuum cleft(2,4).

Conclusions

Differentiating tumor-related from osteoporotic vertebral fractures remains challenging, particularly in elderly patients presenting after minor trauma. CT and MRI play a crucial role in identifying imaging features suggestive of malignancy, allowing the accurate diagno­sis and the appropriate therapeutic management.   

 

Corresponding author: Ioana G. Lupescu E-mail: ioana.lupescu@umfcd.ro

Conflict of interest: none declared.

Financial support: none declared.

This work is permanently accessible online free of charge and published under the CC-BY licence.

Bibliografie


  1. Gallacher SJ, Gallagher AP, McQuillian C, Mitchell PJ, Dixon T. The prevalence of vertebral fracture amongst patients presenting with non-vertebral fractures. Osteoporos Int. 2007;18(2):185–92.

  2. Cotten A. Imagerie musculosquelettique: pathologies locorégionales. 2e édition. Issy-les-Moulineaux: Elsevier Masson; 2017. 

  3. Miao KH, Miao JH, Belani P, et al. Radiological Diagnosis and Advances in Imaging of Vertebral Compression Fractures. J Imaging. 2024;10(10):244. 

  4. Bell D, Tigges S, Chieng R. Osteoporotic vs pathological vertebral fractures. In: Radiopaedia.org. Radiopaedia.org; 2021. DOI: 10.53347/rID-91265.

  5. Wáng YXJ, Santiago FR, Deng M, Nogueira-Barbosa MH. Identifying osteopo­ro­tic vertebral endplate and cortex fractures. Quant Imaging Med Surg. 2017;7(5):555–91. 

  6. Mauch JT, Carr CM, Cloft H, Diehn FE. Review of the Imaging Features of Benign Osteoporotic and Malignant Vertebral Compression Fractures. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2018;39(9):1584–92. 

  7. Herraiz LH, Bermejo AMM, Martin MAA, Carrera R, Manjon P, Manrique J. ECR 2005  EPOS [Internet]. 2005 March 4. Intravertebral vacuum cleft sign: Can we consider it a sign of benign vertebral collapse? [cited 2026 Feb 3]. https://epos.myesr.org/poster/esr/ecr2005/C-0751

  8. Hanrahan CJ, Shah LM. MRI of Spinal Bone Marrow: Part 2, T1-Weighted Imaging-Based Differential Diagnosis. American Journal of Roentgenology. 2011;197(6):1309–21. 

  9. Ahn SE, Ryu KN, Park JS, Jin W, Park SY, Kim SB. Early Bone Marrow Edema Pat­tern of the Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fracture: Can Be Predictor of Vertebral Deformity Types and Prognosis?. J Korean Neurosurg Soc. 2016;59(2):137–42. 

  10. Vande Berg BC, Kirchgesner T, Acid S, Malghem J, Vekemans MC, Lecouvet FE. Diffuse vertebral marrow changes at MRI: Multiple myeloma or normal?. Skeletal Radiol. 2022;51(1):89–99. 

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