Aims.
As patients live longer following treatment for soft tissue sarcomas, complications from treatment will continue to emerge. Predicting which patients are at risk allows for improved preoperative planning, treatment, and surveillance. The data presented here suggests that females greater than fifty-five years of age treated with high dose, postoperative
Chordoma of the cervical spine is a rare but life-threatening disease with a relentless tendency towards local recurrence. Wide en bloc resection is recommended, but it is frequently not feasible in the cervical spine.
Introduction. Treatment of spinal metastatic disease has evolved with the advent of advanced interventional, surgical and radiation techniques. Spinal Oligometastatic disease is a low volume disease state where en bloc resection of the tumour, based on oncological principles, can achieve maximum local control (MLC). Hybrid therapy incorporating Separation surgery (>2mm clearance of the thecal sac) and Stereotactic Ablative
Myxoid or Myxoid Round Cell liposarcoma (MLS) is a mesenchymal malignancy with adipocyte differentiation accounting for 15–20% of liposarcomas and 5% of all adult soft tissue sarcomas (STS). Like other STS, treatment of MLS is generally by wide surgical resection in conjunction with
Between 1966 and 2001, 1254 patients underwent excision of a bone tumour with endoprosthetic replacement. All patients who had
It is generally accepted that there is a high rate of local recurrence following surgical excision of chordoma of the sacrum, even if the margins of excision appear clear. There is uncertainty as to whether the addition of postoperative
The idea of resurfacing the femoral head instead of removing it has been attractive for a long time. Unfortunately the results have been invariably poor if compared with contemporary available conventional hip prosthesis. In the last decade metal on metal technology with very accurate manufacturing made hip resurfacing a viable option. The main complication of this operation is early failure due to femoral neck fracture. This event is still incompletely understood and probably multi-factorial. Accurate placement of the femoral component to avoid notching the femoral neck, cementing technique to avoid over-penetration of the cement, small implantation forces and careful soft tissue handling to minimize the damage to the bone vascularity are thought to be the main issues. The ideal candidates for this operation are young and active patients because they have good bone quality and will take advantage of the improved performances that hip resurfacing can offer. Unfortunately young men are also the group of patients at higher risk for the formation of heterotopic ossifications.). To prevent this complication
Ewing Sarcoma is the second most common primary bone sarcoma in young patients, however, there remains geographical variation in the treatment of these tumours. All patients receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy and, in most cases, the soft tissue mass diminishes significantly in volume. Controversy surrounds whether to then treat the pre- or post-chemotherapy tumour volume. Many centres advocate either (1) resection of the pre-chemotherapy volume or (2) treatment of the pre-chemotherapy volume with radiation followed by resection of the post-chemotherapy volume. These approaches increase both the short and long-term morbidity for this young patient population. In this study, we retrospectively reviewed our experience resecting only the post-chemotherapy volume without the use of (neo)adjuvant
Optimising post-operative joint function is challenging when treating periarticular soft tissue sarcoma (STS).
Introduction: Giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath is a solitary benign soft tissue tumor of the limb. We present our prospective experience of 106 cases, over a period of 22 years to assess the effectiveness of prophylactic
The experience of
Introduction: The role of surgery for local control in the multimodal management of Ewing’s sarcoma has substantially increased during the past 20 years. However, selection bias due to location (extremities vs axial skeleton) and relatively non-homogeneous treatment received by patients in multi-institutional trials may limit objective evaluation and comparison of the relative role of surgery and
Introduction. Tomita En-bloc spondylectomy (TES) of L5 is one of the most challenging spinal surgical techniques. A 42-year-old female was referred with low back pain and L5 radiculopathy with background of right shoulder excision of liposarcoma. CT-PET confirmed a solitary L5 oligometastasis. MRI showed thecal sac indentation and therefore was not suitable for stereotactic ablative
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to analyse outcome of shoulder prostheses after
Purpose: We report a series of patients with malignant tumours of the pelvis that had a tissue expander inserted in the pelvis to facilitate radical
Aim: To present and highlight a remote complication following deep x-ray
Introduction. Sacro-coccygeal chordomas pose a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic problem due to late presentation, large size, soft-tisue extension, difficulties in obtaining adequate resection margins, higher local recurrence rate and uncertain effectiveness of adjuvant treatment. We present a series of 21 patients of sacral chordomas obtained from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry to analyse predictors of local control and survival. Patients and methods. The clinical and morphologic features, type of treatment and follow-up of 21 consecutive patients with sacral chordoma were retrospectively reviewed and analysed. Results. The average age at time of the biopsy was 59 years (range, 12 to 82 years): twelve patients were male and nine were female. Pain was the presenting symptom in all patients. Two had intralesional (both recurred), 9 marginal (4 recurred) and 3 wide resections (1 recurred). Fifteen of the twenty-one patients were treated with adjuvant
Sacro-coccygeal chordomas pose a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic problem due to late presentation, large size, soft-tisue extension, difficulties in obtaining adequate resection margins, higher local recurrence rate and uncertain effectiveness of adjuvant treatment. We present a series of 21 patients of sacral chordomas obtained from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry to analyse predictors of local control and survival. The clinical and morphologic features, type of treatment and follow-up of 21 consecutive patients with sacral chordoma were retrospectively reviewed and analysed. The data were obtained from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry. The average age at time of the biopsy was 59 years (range, 12 to 82 years): twelve patients were male and nine were female. Pain was the presenting symptom in all patients. Two had intralesional (both recurred), 9 marginal (4 recurred) and 3 wide resections (1 recurred). Fifteen of the twenty-one patients were treated with adjuvant
Sacrococcygeal chordoma is a slow growing, malignant tumour with a clinical poor outcome due to a high local recurrence (LR) rate. Several studies emphasize that margin-free tumour resection is the most important predictor of survival and LR in patients with sacrococcygeal chordoma. However, a high recurrence rate still remains. The purpose of this report is to define the role of postoperative