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Oncology

INFECTIONS IN ORTHOPEDIC ONCOLOGY: INCIDENCE, TREATMENT AND OUTCOME

The European Musculo-Skeletal Oncology Society (EMSOS)



Abstract

Aim

was to analyze infections after bone tumour surgery.

Method

1463 patients treated from 1976 to 2007 were analized: 1036 with resection and prostheses in the lower limbs, 344 with resection and prostheses in the upper limbs, 83 with surgery for sacral tumours. Infections were analyzed for time of occurrence (“postoperative” in the first 4 weeks from surgery, “early” within 6 months, and “late” after 6 months), microbic agents, treatment, outcome.

Results

In lower limbs, infections occurred in 80 cases (7.7%): generally monomicrobial, caused by gram positives, postoperative in 9, early in 12, late in 59 cases. Treatment was “two stage” in 73, “one stage” in 4, primary amputation in 3.

Revisions for infection were successful in 63 patients (79%), while 17 patients were amputated (21%).

In upper limbs, infections occurred in 20 cases (5.8%): generally monomicrobial, caused by gram positives (88.5%), postoperative in 2 cases, early in 7, late in 11. “Two stage” treatment was attempted in all cases, but only in 3 prosthesis was re-implanted, since the cement spacer yelded similar function.

No infections were observed in 28 intralesional excisions of sacral giant cell tumours. Infection occurred in 23/52 resected sacral tumours (44%) (Three patients died postoperatively were excluded from this group): postoperative in 16 cases and early in 7, caused by gram negatives in 62% and multimicrobial in 74%. Surgical debridements associated with antibiotic therapy according to coltures cured infection in all cases.

Conclusion

Infection is a severe complication in orthopedic oncology. Its incidence in the extremities (7.7% and 5.8%) is lower than after sacral surgery (44%). It is influenced by chemotherapy and by the presence of foreign bodies. Infections were mostly late, monomicrobial, gram positive in extremities, while early, multimicrobial and gram negative in sacral surgery.