Renal
The aim of surgery in the treatment of tumours of the distal radius is to achieve satisfactory clearance whilst best preserving function of the hand and wrist. Since 1992 a technique of distal radial tumour excision with reconstruction by autologous free fibula strut grafting has been employed in the treatment of thirteen patients at our unit. The procedure employs fixation of the non-vascularised fibula shaft to the proximal radius by step-cuts and a dynamic compression plate. The fibula head substitutes for the distal limit of the radius and articulates with the carpus. We have treated 10 cases of primary or recurrent giant cell tumour and cases of osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma and Ewings’ sarcoma by this technique. The patients were reviewed at a mean of 50 months post surgery, with assessment of their functional outcome and measurement of the range of wrist movement and grip strength. The patient with Ewings tumour had died of meta-static disease 62 months post grafting. Three patients treated for giant cell tumour had required further surgery, two of these had forearm amputation for malignant transformation. In comparison to the unoperated wrist, range of movement was well preserved. The power of grip strength was 57% of the contralateral wrist and hand. These results compare well with published rates of recurrence of benign giant cell tumour treated by other methods. This technique would seem to offer an acceptable functional result without compromise of the tumour prognosis.
Aims. The standard of surgical treatment for lower limb
Cartilage lesions vary in the spectrum from benign enchondromas to highly malignant dedifferentiated chondrosarcomas. From the treatment perspective, enchondromas are observed, Grade 1 chondrosarcomas are curetted like aggressive benign tumors, and rest are resected like other sarcomas. Although biopsy for tissue diagnosis is the gold standard for diagnosis and grade determination in chondrosarcoma, tumor heterogeneity limits the grading in patients following a biopsy. In the absence of definite pre-treatment grading, a surgeon is therefore often in a dilemma when deciding the best treatment option. Radiology has identified aggressive features and aggressiveness scores have been used to try and grade these tumors based on the imaging characteristics but there have been very few published reports with a uniform group and large number of cases to derive a consistent scoring and correlation. The authors asked these study questions :(1) Does Radiology Aggressiveness and its Score correlate with the grade of chondrosarcoma? (2) Can a cut off Radiology Agressiveness Score value be used to guide the clinician and add value to needle biopsy information in offering histological grade dependent management?. A retrospective analysis of patients with long bone extremity intraosseous primary chondrosarcomas were correlated with the final histology grade for the operated patients and Radiological parameters with 9 parameters identified a priori and from published literature (radiology aggressiveness scores - RAS) were evaluated and tabulated. 137 patients were identified and 2 patients were eliminated for prior surgical intervention. All patients had tissue diagnosis available and pre-treatment local radiology investigations (radiographs and/or CT scans and MRI scans) to define the RAS parameters. Spearman correlation has indicated that there was a significant positive association between RAS and final histology grading of long bone primary intraosseous chondrosarcomas. We expect higher RAS values will provide grading information in patients with inconclusive pre-surgery biopsy to tumor grades and aid in correct grade dependant surgical management of the lesion. Prediction of dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma from higher RAS will be attempted and a correlation to obtain a RAS cut off, although this may be challenging to achieve due to the overlap of features across the intermediate grade, high grade and dedifferentiated grades. Radiology Aggressiveness correlates with the histologic grade in long bone extremity primary chondrosarcomas and the correlation of radiology and biopsy can aid in treatment planning by guiding us towards a low-grade
Sarcopenia has been observed to be a predictor of mortality in international studies of patients with metastatic disease of the spine. This study aimed to validate sarcopenia as a prognostic tool in a New Zealand setting. A secondary aim of this study was to assess the intra-observer reliability of measurements of psoas and vertebral body cross sectional areas on computed tomography imaging. A cohort of patients who had presented to Waikato Hospital with secondary
When a suspicious spine lesion is identified, an accurate diagnosis based on tissue biopsy is needed to direct towards the correct treatment protocol. Several studies concluded that the percutaneous fluoroscopy guided biopsy of vertebral lesions is a safe, effective and accurate diagnostic tool and is preferred over open techniques when possible. The aim of this study was to review percutaneous fluoroscopy guided transpedicular spinal biopsies at a tertiary hospital over a 6-year period. The research design was a retrospective review of patients who underwent percutaneous transpedicular spinal biopsies under fluoroscopy guidance at a tertiary hospital over a six year period (1st January 2016 to the 31st December 2021). The spine theatre registry and hospital records system were used as the source for data collection. Statistical analysis was conducted to determine the effectiveness of transpedicular spinal biopsies, compare spinal pathology amongst age and gender and to identify any complications. The study analysed 180 biopsies, 120 yielding a positive result (66.67%). Of these 8.9% were pyogenic infection, 18.4%
Giant cell tumors of bone (GCTs) are locally aggressive tumors with recurrence potential that represent up to 10% of primary tumors of the bone. GCTs pathogenesis is driven by neoplastic mononuclear stromal cells that overexpress receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B/ligand (RANKL). Treatment with specific anti-RANKL antibody (denosumab) was recently introduced, used either as a neo-adjuvant in resectable tumors or as a stand-alone treatment in unresectable tumors. While denosumab has been increasingly used, a percentage of patients do not improve after treatment. Here, we aim to determine molecular and histological patterns that would help predicting GCTs response to denosumab to improve personalized treatment. Nine pre-treatment biopsies of patients with spinal GCT were collected at 2 centres. In 4 patients denosumab was used as a neo-adjuvant, 3 as a stand-alone and 2 received denosumab as adjuvant treatment. Clinical data was extracted retrospectively. Total mRNA was extracted by using a formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded extraction kit and we determined the transcript profile of 730 immune-oncology related genes by using the Pan Cancer Immune Profiling panel (Nanostring). The gene expression was compared between patients with good and poor response to Denosumab treatment by using the nSolver Analysis Software (Nanostring). Immunohistochemistry was performed in the tissue slides to characterize cell populations and immune response in CGTs. Two out of 9 patients showed poor clinical response with tumor progression and metastasis. Our analysis using unsupervised hierarchical clustering determined differences in gene expression between poor responders and good responders before denosumab treatment. Poor responding lesions are characterized by increased expression of inflammatory cytokines as IL8, IL1, interferon a and g, among a myriad of cytokines and chemokines (CCL25, IL5, IL26, IL25, IL13, CCL20, IL24, IL22, etc.), while good responders are characterized by elevated expression of platelets (CD31 and PECAM), coagulation (CD74, F13A1), and complement classic pathway (C1QB, C1R, C1QBP, C1S, C2) markers, together with extracellular matrix proteins (COL3A1, FN1,. Interestingly the T-cell response is also different between groups. Poor responding lesions have increased Th1 and Th2 component, but good responders have an increased Th17 component. Interestingly, the checkpoint inhibitor of the immune response PD1 (PDCD1) is increased ~10 fold in poor responders. This preliminary study using a novel experimental approach revealed differences in the immune response in GCTs associated with clinical response to denosumab. The increased activity of checkpoint inhibitor PD1 in poor responders to denosumab treatment may have implications for therapy, raising the potential to investigate immunotherapy as is currently used in other
The aim of the research was to improve the results of complex ray diagnostics and monitoring in the treatment stages of patients with malignant neoplasms of soft tissues and bones using ultrasound dopplerography (US-dopplerography). US-dopplerography data in 38 patients with tumors of soft tissues and bone tumors with infiltrated soft tissues are studied in the course of treatment. The following criteria were investigated by dopplerography: arterio-venous blood-flow, venous blood-flow, maximal velocity (Vmax) of blood, minimal velocity (Vmin) of blood, index of resistance (IR), pulse index (PI). In 7of 38 patients US-dopplerography was performed repeatedly in dynamics. In 2 patients with fibrosarcoma character of
Biopsy is a key step in the diagnosis of bone and soft tissue tumours. An inadequately performed biopsy may fail to allow proper diagnosis. An improperly planned biopsy may jeopardise plans for limb salvage surgery. Aims: To analyse the effectiveness of core-needle biopsy for evaluation of suspected primary musculoskeletal
To determine whether sacral chordoma is monoclonal or polyclonal in origin, a new assay to study the polymorphic human androgen receptor locus (HUMARA) was applied. The ratio of maternal inactive X-chromosone to the paternal inactive X (Lyon hypothesis) was determined via a methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. Seven of seven informative samples showed a polyclonal proliferation pattern. This study suggests that chordomas are more comparable to mesenchymal
Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP) is a rare, monoclonal dermal
In France, 5% of men and 7% of women aged more than 60 years have a joint prosthesis (JP). The incidence of H-PJI following BSI remains unknown (1–2). The aim of this study was to determine prospectively the clinical characteristics of patients with JP and the incidence of H-PJI following a BSI. A prospective observational multicentric study was performed in two French General Hospitals, from December 2012 to April 2015. Each patient with JP, in whom a BSI was diagnosed, was evaluated prospectively by an ID specialist. Data regarding clinical and microbiological characteristics were collected. A follow-up by phone call was performed monthly during 6 months to determine the incidence of H-PJI following BSI. During the study period, 97 patients of mean age ± SD of 82.1 ± 10.4 years were identified, with a predominance of women (n=61). Nineteen patients (20%) had
Osteosarcoma arising on the periosteal aspect of bone comprises a biologically heterogeneous group of
Aim. bone and joint infection (BJI) in aging population, continues to be associated with significant morbi-mortality. In western Europeans countries, the Gram positive BJI are preponderant. Vancomycin was the “gold standard” and the full treatment requires prolonged antibiotic therapy. Dalbavancin is a semi-synthetic lipoglycopeptideanalog of teicoplanin class of antibiotics with bactericidal activity and a long half-life. The use of dalbavancin in BJI could be an option. Methods. during November 2017 and April 2019, Dalbavancin was used in monotherapy as salvage option in BJI: 1500 mg, 1. st. (D1) and 8. th. day (D8), repeated if needed. The clinical and biological follow up was for 6 months if osteomyelitis or BJI without prosthesis and 1 year if prosthesis (PJI). Results. the demographics of 16 patients are: 75.0% men (n=12), mean age 77.8 years [64–90], 37.5% (n=6) diabetes, 68.8% (n=11) renal failure, 37.5% (n=6) atrial fibrillation, 18.8% (n=3) cardiac bioprosthesis, 31.2% (n=5) lower limb arteriopathy, and one patient with active
Introduction: Most of the bone metastases have origin in breast, lung, prostate, thyroid and kidney
Purpose: To describe the percutaneous transpedicular biopsy technique as a novel way of approaching lesion of the thoracic and lumbar spine, to determine the amount of bone retrievable through the pedicle and its diagnostic yield. Material and Methods: Seventy-nine patients underwent 84 biopsies. Seventy-seven procedures were performed with ßuoroscopic guidance arid seven with CT guidance. Seventy-one biopsies underwent under local anesthesia and ten under general anesthesia. Age range of patient was from 3 to 81 years. Results: Adequate specimens for correct diagnosis were obtained in 80 of the 84 patients with the following diagnoses. Pyogenic spondylodiscitis 31, tuberculosis 4, coccidiomycosis 2, echinococcus cyst 1, blastomycosis 1, brucella 4, primary
To determine whether the spectrum of genetic mutation in Hereditary Multiple Exostoses supports a neoplastic aetiology for this condition. Historically, experts have been cautious in attributing neoplastic qualities to the osteochondroma. Solomon states ‘[osteochondromas] are not neoplastic in the ordinary sense of the word’; Morton that it ‘is not a tumour but a growth-aberration; Peterson that the ‘osteochondroma is not a true
Aim. Bone and joint infections (BJI) are associated with a heavy morbidity and high health costs. Comorbidities, device associated infections and complicated journeys are associated with increased mortality, treatment failures and costs. For this reason, 24 referral centers (RC) have been created in 2009 in order to advise about management of “complex” BJI in weekly multidisciplinary meetings (MM). Since end of 2012, data from these meetings are gathered in a national database. We aimed to describe the data from this French registry of BJI and determine factors associated with the definition of “complex” BJI. Method. Demographic, clinical, microbiologic and therapeutic characteristics of patients are systematically recorded in the database. Data from the first presentation in RC for each adult patients are presented. Complexity of BJI is recorded after each meeting according to 4 criteria (first failure, complex antibiotic therapy, precarious underlying conditions or complex surgical procedure). Part of unavailable data have been completed by pattern extraction from text-encoded commentaries. Factors associated with complexity were determined by multivariate logistic regression. Results. From 2012 to 2016, 17.527 patients were included corresponding to 30.300 presentations in MM. Median age was 64 years (IQR 50–76) with masculine predominance (61.8%). Comorbidity was present in 50.3%, with at least 2 comorbidities in 26%. Prosthetic joint infection represented 41.4% of patients, followed by chronic osteitis with/without foreign material (24%). Definite microbiologic documentation was available in 68.8% of cases, mostly Staphylococcus aureus (43.9%) followed by Coagulase negative Staphylococci (28.6%) and enterobacteriaceae (23.1%), with 27.4% of polybacterial infections. Antibiotic treatment was proposed in 81.6% and surgery in 70% of cases. BJI were defined as complex in 55.4%, mostly because underlying conditions (50%), and in 57.6% with at least 2 complexity criteria. Factors positively associated with definition of complexity in MM were: background: number of comorbidities, immunodeficiency,
Safety concerns surrounding osseointegration are a significant barrier to replacing socket prosthesis as the standard of care following limb amputation. While implanted osseointegrated prostheses traditionally occur in two stages, a one-stage approach has emerged. Currently, there is no existing comparison of the outcomes of these different approaches. To address safety concerns, this study sought to determine whether a one-stage osseointegration procedure is associated with fewer adverse events than the two-staged approach. A comprehensive electronic search and quantitative data analysis from eligible studies were performed. Inclusion criteria were adults with a limb amputation managed with a one- or two-stage osseointegration procedure with follow-up reporting of complications.Aims
Methods