It is frequently difficult to diagnose and treat of malignant
Aim:
Objective. To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes following resection of
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
Introduction: Benign bone-forming tumours are common in children and adolescents. Careful radiographical and histological study is necessary to distinguish slow growing from more aggressive bone forming tumours. We reviewed 25 cases of primary benign bone forming tumours of the spine to investigate whether there were any obvious differences in their biological behaviour in adults compared to children. Materials and Methods: Twenty five cases of primary benign bone forming tumours of the spine were identified from the Scottish Bone Tumour Registry: this data is collected prospectively. A retrospective review of this data was performed. There were 9 osteoid osteomas, 15 osteoblastomas and 1 aggressive osteoblastoma. These cases were divided into group A (children) and group B (adults). Results: There were 16 patients in group A (6-osteoid osteoma, 9-osteoblastoma, 1-aggressive osteoblastoma), 10 boys and 6 girls. The mean age was 12.1 years (range, 6–16 years). There were 2 cervical, 4 thoracic, 8 lumbar and 2
Introduction: Benign bone-forming tumours are common in children and adolescents. Careful radiographical and histological study is necessary to distinguish slow growing from more aggressive bone forming tumours. We reviewed 25 cases of primary benign bone forming tumours of the spine to investigate whether there were any obvious differences in the biological behaviour of such tumours in adults compared to children. Materials and Methods: Twenty five cases of primary benign bone forming tumours of the spine were identified from the Scottish Bone Tumour Registry: this data is collected prospectively. A retrospective review of this data was performed. There were 9 osteoid osteomas,15 osteoblastomas and 1 aggressive osteoblastoma. These cases were divided into group A (children) and group B (adults). Results: There were 16 patients in group A (6-osteoid osteoma, 9-osteoblastoma, 1-aggressive osteoblastoma), 10 boys and 6 girls. The mean age was 12.1 years (range, 6–16 years). There were 2 cervical, 4 thoracic, 8 lumbar and 2
Purpose: Aim of this study was to analyse the incidence of infection in orthopaedic oncology after major surgical procedures for bone tumors. Materials and Methods: We included patients with primary
Background:
Introduction. Although various reports analyzed “en-bloc” excision of
Objective. To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes following sacral resection. Methods. Retrospective review of 97
To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes following resection of primary malignant bone tumours. Primary malignant tumours of the sacrum are rare, arising from bony or neural elements, or bone marrow in haematological malignancies. Management of these lesions is dictated by anatomical considerations and the behaviour of tumours. The three key issues which arise are the adequacy of tumour resection, mechanical stabilisation and the need for colostomy. A retrospective review of the surgical management of primary malignant
Resecting bone tumours within the pelvis is highly challenging and requires good cutting accuracy to achieve sufficient margins. Computer-assisted technologies such as intraoperative navigation have been developed for pelvic bone tumour resection. Patient-specific instruments have been transposed to tumour surgery. The present study reports a series of 11 clinical cases of PSI-assisted bone tumour surgery within the pelvis, and assesses how accurately a preoperative resection strategy can be replicated intraoperatively with the PSI. The patient series consisted in 11 patients eligible for curative surgical resection of primary bone tumor of the pelvis. Eight patients had a bone sarcoma of iliac bone involving the acetabulum, two patients had a
Objective. To evaluate functional and oncological outcomes following sacral resection. Methods. A retrospective review was conducted of 97
Purpose: To report the genetic correlation of familial chordoma, a rare tumour of embryonic notochordal remnant. Method: We present two patients with a family history of chordoma. Both patients had surgery at our unit, one for a clival and one for a
Introduction: Tumours of sacrum are rare. Treatment depends on malignancy or local aggressiveness: resection is indicated for malignant lesions, intralesional surgery for benign. Purpose of this study was to analyse risk of infection and its treatment after surgery for the two most common primary
CT and MRI scans are complementary preoperative imaging investigations for planning complex musculoskeletal bone tumours resection and reconstruction. Conventionally, tumour surgeons analyse two-dimensional (2-D) imaging information, mentally integrate and formulate a three-dimensional (3-D) surgical plan. Difficulties are anticipated with increase in case complexity and distorted surgical anatomy. Incorporating computer technology to aid in this surgical planning and executing the intended resection may improve precision. Although computer-assisted surgery has been widely used in cranial biopsies and tumour resection, only small case series using CT-based navigation are recently reported in the field of musculoskeletal tumor surgery. We investigated the results of CT/MRI image fusion for Computer Assisted Tumor Surgery (CATS) with the help of a navigation system. We studied 21 patients with 22 musculoskeletal tumours who underwent CATS from March 2006 to July 2009. A commercially available CT-based spine navigation system (Stryker Navigation; CT spine) was used. Of the 22 patients, 10 were males, 11 were females, and the mean age was 32 years at the time of surgery (range, 6–80 years). Five tumours were located in the pelvis, seven sacrum, eight femurs, and two tibia. The primary diagnosis was primary bone tumours in 16 (3 benign, 13 sarcoma) and metastatic carcinoma in four. The minimum follow-up was 17 months (average, 35.5 months; range, 17–52 months). Preoperative CT and MRI scan of each patient were performed. Axial CT slices of 0.0625mm or 1.25mm thickness and various sequences of MR images in Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) format were obtained. CT and MR images for 22 cases were fused using the navigation software. All the reconstructed 2-D and 3-D images were used for preoperative surgical planning. The plane of tumour resection was defined and marked using multiple virtual screws sited along the margin of the planned resection. We also integrated the computer-aided design (CAD) data of custom-made prostheses in the final navigation resection planning for eight cases. All tumour resections could be carried out as planned under navigation guidance. Navigation software enabled surgeons to examine all fused image datasets (CT/MRI scans) together in two spatial and three spatial dimensions. It allowed easier understanding of the exact anatomical tumor location and relationship with surrounding structures. Intraoperatively, image guidance with the help of fusion images, provided precise visual orientation, easy identification of tumor extent, neural structures and intended resection planes in all cases. The mean time for preoperative navigation planning was 1.85 hours (1 to 3.8). The mean time for intraoperative navigation procedures was 29.6 minutes (13 to 60). The time increased with case complexity but lessened with practice. The mean registration error was 0.47mm (0.31 to 0.8). The virtual preoperative images matched well with the patients' operative anatomy. A postoperative superficial wound infection developed in one patient with sacral chordoma that resolved with antibiotic whereas a wound infection in another with sacral osteosarcoma required surgical debridement and antibiotic. After a mean follow-up of 35.5 months (17–52 months), five patients died of distant metastases. Three out of four patients with local recurrence had
We evaluated the accuracy of augmented reality (AR)-based navigation assistance through simulation of bone tumours in a pig femur model. We developed an AR-based navigation system for bone tumour resection, which could be used on a tablet PC. To simulate a bone tumour in the pig femur, a cortical window was made in the diaphysis and bone cement was inserted. A total of 133 pig femurs were used and tumour resection was simulated with AR-assisted resection (164 resection in 82 femurs, half by an orthropaedic oncology expert and half by an orthopaedic resident) and resection with the conventional method (82 resection in 41 femurs). In the conventional group, resection was performed after measuring the distance from the edge of the condyle to the expected resection margin with a ruler as per routine clinical practice.Objectives
Methods