# Delayed Aggressive Local Recurrence of Chondroblastic Osteosarcoma 3 Years After an Excellent Pathological Response: A Case Report

**Authors:** Abdul Hannan, Bilal Aslam, Natasha Hastings, Deepa Lachhman Das, Zahra Sania, Marium Mansoor, Fazeela Bibi, Khalil El Abdi, Samreen Najeeb, Kristen Batten, Manisha Kumari, Said Hamid Sadat

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ccr3.71816 · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

A patient with osteosarcoma had a strong initial response to treatment but experienced a severe recurrence after three years, showing that even successful treatment doesn't fully eliminate cancer risk.

## Contribution

This case report highlights that excellent initial treatment outcomes do not guarantee long-term remission in osteosarcoma.

## Key findings

- An aggressive local recurrence occurred 3 years after an excellent pathological response and wide surgical margins.
- The case underscores the need for lifelong surveillance in osteosarcoma survivors due to the risk of delayed relapse.
- The phenomenon suggests the importance of studying tumor dormancy and improving detection of residual disease.

## Abstract

Late recurrence of osteosarcoma after a prolonged disease‐free interval is an uncommon but significant clinical challenge, representing a failure of primary therapy to eradicate microscopic residual disease. We present the case of a 19‐year‐old male diagnosed with chondroblastic osteosarcoma of the proximal tibia who was treated with standard multimodal therapy, including neoadjuvant chemotherapy and limb‐salvage surgery. He achieved wide (R0) surgical margins and an excellent (Huvos Grade IV, > 95% necrosis) pathological response. After a 3‐year disease‐free interval, he presented with an aggressive and extensive local recurrence in the residual tibia, which ultimately necessitated a below‐knee amputation for local control. This case demonstrates that an excellent initial pathological response and wide surgical margins do not preclude the risk of a delayed and highly aggressive relapse in osteosarcoma. It serves as a critical reminder that a “cure” is provisional and underscores the absolute necessity of indefinite, long‐term oncologic surveillance for all survivors. The phenomenon of late recurrence highlights the urgent need for research into tumor dormancy and the development of surveillance tools capable of detecting minimal residual disease.

An excellent pathological response (Huvos Grade IV) and wide surgical margins in osteosarcoma do not preclude aggressive, delayed local recurrence. This case highlights the clinical reality of tumor dormancy and mandates indefinite, lifelong oncologic surveillance for all survivors, as a “cure” must be considered provisional.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** osteosarcoma (MONDO:0002623), chondroblastic osteosarcoma (MONDO:0002627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** necrosis (MESH:D009336), Chondroblastic Osteosarcoma (MESH:D012516), tumor (MESH:D009369)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12778439/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12778439