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General Orthopaedics

SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF PRIMARY MALIGNANT SACRAL TUMOURS: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EXPERIENCE OF THE ONCOLOGY AND SPINAL UNIT

12th Combined Meeting of the Orthopaedic Associations (AAOS, AOA, AOA, BOA, COA, NZOA, SAOA)



Abstract

Objective

To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes following sacral resection

Methods

A retrospective review was conducted of 97 sacral tumours referred to tertiary referral spinal or oncology unit between 2004 and 2009.

Results

The study included Chordoma 26; Metastases 17; Chondrosarcoma 9; Osteosarcoma 8; Lymphoma 7; Ewing's Sarcoma 6; Giant Cell Tumours 5; Other Sarcomas 5; Aneurysmal Bone Cyst 4; Myeloma 4; Others 7. There were 61 males, 37 females with an average age of 47 (range 3-82). The average duration of pre-diagnosis symptoms was 13 months. In 17 cases the diagnosis was metastatic disease and these were excluded from further discussion. Of the remainder 36/81(44%) underwent surgery: 21 excision, 9 excision and instrumented stabilisation, and 6 curettage. Thirteen (16%) patients were inoperable: 8 advanced disease, 3 unable to establish local control and 2 cases of recurrence. Colostomy was performed in 11/21 (52%) patients who underwent excision. Deep wound infections in 6/21 (29%). No difference in infection rates between definitive surgery with or without colostomy – 3/11 (27%) vs 3/10 (30%). In the instrumented group, no colostomies were performed due to concerns about deep infection and none resulted (0/9). Radiological failure of stabilisation was noted in 7/9(78%). However, functionally, 3/9 (33%) were mobilising independently, 3/9 (33%) with crutches, 2/9 (22%) able to transfer and 1/9 (11%) undocumented. Mean follow-up was 25 months (range 0-70). Local recurrence in 9/36 (25%) of operated patients. Metastasis occurred in 4/36 (11%) and mortality 8/36 (22%) although follow-up period was noted to be short.

Conclusions

Results are comparable with current literature. Mechanical stabilisation for extensive sacral lesions is challenging. Despite radiological failure in 7/9 instrumented stabilisations, patients were relatively asymptomatic and only 1/9 required revision stabilisation surgery. By design none had colostomies and there were no deep infections.


S Chan, 156 Newhampton Road East, Wolverhampton WV1 4BD, UK