# Giant cell tumor of bone in the mandible presenting without typical histological features: a case report

**Authors:** Kaori Oya, Kouhei Kawamura, Ryou Akiyama, Hiroki Kiyokawa, Toshihiro Uchihashi, Hiroaki Shimamoto, Tadashi Sasai, Shin-Ichiro Hiraoka, Shumei Murakami, Satoru Toyosawa

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13256-025-05601-8 · Journal of Medical Case Reports · 2025-10-21

## TL;DR

A rare case of giant cell tumor of bone in the jaw was diagnosed using a specific marker, H3.3G34W, despite lacking typical histological features.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the utility of H3.3G34W immunostaining in diagnosing atypical giant cell tumor of bone in the jaw.

## Key findings

- The tumor lacked conventional histological features of giant cell tumor of bone.
- H3.3G34W positivity confirmed the diagnosis despite atypical morphology.
- Giant cell tumor of bone can occur in the jaw, though it is rare.

## Abstract

Giant cell tumor of bone is a locally aggressive bone tumor characterized by the proliferation of round-to-oval mononuclear cells and uniformly distributed osteoclast-type giant cells. Giant cell tumor of bone typically arises in long bones, whereas craniofacial involvement is rare. Atypical histological and clinical presentations can complicate diagnosis. This study presents a challenging case of giant cell tumor of bone in the mandible.

A Japanese man in his 70s presented with a slowly expanding radiolucent lesion in the left mandible, first noted a decade ago, with no subjective symptoms. Cone-beam computed tomography revealed a 27 mm × 12 mm × 23 mm radiolucent lesion with irregular borders and discontinuity of the mandibular canal. Excisional biopsy showed the proliferation of bland spindle cells with small multinucleated cells, which indicated central giant cell granuloma. However, the spindle cells were positive for H3.3G34W, a specific marker of giant cell tumor of bone, which confirmed the diagnosis of giant cell tumor of bone. Conventional histological features of giant cell tumor of bone were absent throughout the observation period.

Morphological analysis alone is insufficient for diagnosing giant cell tumor of bone, and H3.3G34W immunostaining is valuable in distinguishing it from other giant cell lesions. The possibility of giant cell tumor of bone should not be ruled out in cases involving the jaw, although its occurrence is rare.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** giant cell tumor of bone (MONDO:0005674), central giant cell granuloma (MONDO:0006770)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** giant cell granuloma (MESH:D006101), giant cell lesions (MESH:D018286), bone tumor (MESH:D001859), Giant cell tumor of bone (MESH:D018212)

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12538768/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12538768