Aims. The Birmingham Orthopaedic Oncology Meeting (BOOM), held in January 2024, convened 309 delegates from 53 countries to discuss and refine 21 consensus statements on the optimal management of chondrosarcoma. Methods. With representation from Europe (43%; n = 133), North America (17%; n = 53), South America (16%; n = 49), Asia (13%; n = 40), Australasia (5%; n = 16), the Middle East (4%; n = 12), and Africa (2%; n = 6), the combined experience of treating bone sarcomas among attendees totalled approximately 30,000 cases annually, equivalent to 66 years of experience in the UK alone. The meeting’s process began with the formation of a local organizing committee, regional leads, and a scientific committee comprising representatives from 150 specialist units across 47 countries. Supported by major orthopaedic oncology organizations, the meeting used a modified Delphi process to develop consensus statements through online questionnaires, thematic groupings, narrative reviews, and anonymous pre-meeting polling. Results. Strong (> 80%) consensus was achieved on 19 out of 21 statements, reflecting agreement among delegates. Key areas of consensus included the role of radiology in diagnosis and surveillance, the management of locally recurrent disease, and the treatment of
Cartilage lesions vary in the spectrum from benign enchondromas to highly malignant
The influence of advancements in imaging and chemotherapy on patient with
Background: And Aims Pathological fractures of the proximal femur due to primary bone sarcomas are difficult to treat. The aim of the study was to assess the factors determining the outcomes following pathological fractures of the proximal femur due to primary bone sarcomas. Methods: 93 patients with a pathological fracture of the proximal femur due to primary bone sarcomas were studied. The patient, tumour and treatment factors in relation to overall survival were analysed. Results: There were 55 male and 38 female patients. The mean age was 47 years. The diagnoses were Chondrosarcoma -34, Osteosarcoma – 21, spindle cell sarcoma – 25, Ewing’s sarcoma -13. 74 patients had a pathological fracture at diagnosis and 19 patients had a fracture after the diagnosis. 17 patients had metastases at diagnosis. 24 patients had an intracapsular fracture. Limb salvage was possible in 60 patients (65%), 18 patients had an amputation and 15 patients had palliative treatment. 27% of the patients were referred after an unplanned surgery. The mean follow up was 49 months [range 0–302]. Twenty one patients [23%] had a local recurrence -10 patients had a diagnosis of chondrosarcoma, four patients had osteosarcoma and seven had spindle cell sarcoma. The overall five years survival was 37% [Ewing’s sarcoma 60%, Chondrosarcoma 57%, spindle cell sarcoma 28%, osteosarcoma 13% and
Purpose: In our records on bone tumours, secondary chondrosarcomas account for slightly less than 15% of all chondrosarcomas (20/150). The presentation is quite variable making diagnosis relatively difficult. We reviewed our experience to evaluate diagnosis, frequency, and prognosis. Material and methods: From 1981 to January 2002, we had 20 chondrosarcomas which developed on pre-existing lesions: solitary exostoses (n=11), solitary chondroma (n=1), multiple exostosis (n=6), multiple enchondromatosis (n=2). Localisations were: pelvis (n=9), femur (n=3), humerus (n=2), tibia (n=3), spine (n=2), scapula (n=1). Histological classification was: grade I (n=7), grade II (n=9), grade III (n=1), and dedifferentiated sarcoma (n=3). Surgery was performed in all patients, alone for grade I and II chondrosarcoma, in association with chemotherapy (n=3) and radiotherapy (n=1) in three patients with dedifferentiated sarcoma. Results and prognostic factors: At last follow-up (mean 9 years 10 months), five patients had died after local recurrence (n=3) or metastatic dissemination (n=2). The other fifteen patients were living (mean follow-up 155 months). The main prognostic factor was histological grade of chondrosarcoma. All patients with grade I chondrosarcoma (n=7) survived versus only two-thirds of those with grade II chondrosarcoma and half (2/4) of those with grade III or
Chondrosarcomas are uncommon primary malignant cartilaginous tumours, even less common in spine. Surgical excision is the only mode of successful treatment as these tumours are resistant to conventional chemotherapy and radiation therapy. We share our experience of 22 cases of chondrosarcomas of the spine with special reference to their recurrence and survival. We identified 20 conventional and 2
Seven patients who had malignant proximal femoral tumours were selected for resection and limb salvage with a modular megaprosthesis. Histopathological diagnosis confirmed one solitary bone metastasis from renal cell carcinoma, one
Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is a rare but highly malignant manifestation that can occasionally arise in patients with cartilage tumours. There remains uncertainty as to the best treatment for this condition and in particular whether chemotherapy may have a role in improving prognosis. Members of EMSOS were invited to contribute data on patients, tumours, treatment and outcomes of patients with
Chondrosarcoma is treated with respect by oncology surgeons, given that it is relatively resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The aim was to study the outcomes of surgery for chondrosarcoma and determine the role of initial surgical margins and local recurrence on outcome. Electronic patient records were retrieved on all patients seen with chondrosarcoma of bone with a minimum of two years follow up. A total of 532 patients were seen with Chondrosarcoma between 1970 and 2006. Patients were excluded if they had initial treatment in another unit (20 patients), a subdiagnosis of
EUROpean Bone Over 40 Sarcoma Study (EURO-B.O.S.S.) is the first prospective multicenter international study for patients 41–65 year old with high-grade bone sarcoma. Patients with HG Osteosarcoma (OS), HG sarcoma NOS (S), Fibrosarcoma, MFH, Leiomyosarcoma, Dedifferentiated Chondrosarcoma (DCh) were included. Chemotherapy: Combinations of cisplatin/doxorubicin (CDP 100mg/m2/ADM 60mg/m2), ifosfamide/CDP(IFO 6g/m2/CDP 100mg/m2) and IFO/ADM (IFO 6g/m2/ADM 60mg/m2) were repeated three times (9 cycles). Surgery was planned after 3 cycles. Methotrexate (8g/m2) was postoperatively added in poor responders. Immediate surgery was allowed and 9 cycles with CDP, ADM, IFO were postoperatively given. At December 2007, 140 patients were registered (median age 51 years). OS (51%), S (16%), and DCh (11%) were the more frequent histotypes. Synchronous metastases in 30 (21%) patients, central location of tumor in 45(32%).Surgical complete remission (SCR) was achieved in 84% of patients, (localized 91%, meta-static 37%) without difference among the histology groups. One surgical-related and one chemotherapy-related death were reported. Grade4 WBC and PLT incidence was 55% and 17%.Renal toxicity and peripheral neurotoxicity were reported in 16% and 20% of patients. With a median follow-up of 25 months (4–68) 3 year OS was 58% (95%CI 48–68%) [7% (95%CI 0–19%) without SCR]. In patients with SCR, 3-year OS and EFS were 46% (95%CI 9–83%) and 0% in case of synchronous metastases and 69% (95%CI58–80%) and 45% (95%CI33–57%) for localized patients; 50% (95%CI 29–71%) and 40% (95%CI 20–59%) for patients with central tumor, 73% (95%CI61–85%) and 44% (95%CI31–57%) for those with extremity tumor; 68% (95%CI 52–83%) and 46% (95%CI 32–54%) for OS, 64% (95%CI 42–85%) and 48% (95%CI 25–71%) for S, 48% (95%CI 13–82%) and 27% (95%CI 1–54%) for DCh. The protocol is feasible, but the chemotherapy-related toxicity is remarkable. Surgical complete remission is the main factor influencing survival. Central location and synchronous metastases are negative prognostic factors, but 50% 3-year OS can be achieved with aggressive local and systemic treatment. Osteosarcoma and high-grade sarcoma NOS benefit from chemotherapy more than patients with
Introduction: Chondrosarcoma has always been treated with respect by oncology surgeons, given that it is relatively resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The importance of the adequacy of surgical resection margins has been previously reported, however, the aim of the study was to study the outcomes of surgery for Chondrosarcoma and determine the role of initial surgical margins and local recurrence on final outcome. Methods: Electronic patient records were retrieved on all patients seen at a tertiary referral musculoskeletal oncology centre with Chondrosarcoma of bone with a minimum of 2 years follow up. A total of 532 patients were seen with Chondrosarcoma between 1970 and 1/1/2006. Patients were excluded if they had initial treatment in another unit (20 patients), a subdiagnosis of
The aim of this study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of 3D-printed modular prostheses in patients who underwent joint-sparing limb salvage surgery (JSLSS) for malignant femoral diaphyseal bone tumours. We retrospectively reviewed 17 patients (13 males and four females) with femoral diaphyseal tumours who underwent JSLSS in our hospital.Aims
Methods
The August 2015 Oncology Roundup360 looks at: Glasgow prognostic score in soft-tissue sarcoma; Denosumab in giant cell tumour; Timing, complications and radiotherapy; Pigmented villonodular synovitis and arthroscopy; PATHFx: estimating survival in pathological cancer; Prosthetic lengthening of short stumps; Chondrosarcoma and pathological fracture