We present the results of 15 patients revised with a Compress® prosthesis secondary to failure of other distal femur reconstruction. One prosthesis had to be removed because of deep infection. Three patients needed a second surgery due to a vertical crack proximal to the anchor plug at the level of a cortical bone defect. At last follow-up, radiologic evaluation of the entire series showed a mean bone growth ratio higher than did preoperative radiographs. All patients had mainly good or excellent MSTS functional results. Distal femoral prosthetic replacement with a Compress® implant in severe cases of bone loosening and instability provides a reliable reconstruction alternative that promotes bone formation. Patients with cortical defects proximal to the anchor plug should be protected with extracortical supports.
The objective of this study was to compare the results of two consecutive series of patients with either intra-medullary uncemented stems (UCS) distal femoral endoprosthetic replacement or the Compress® (CMP) distal femoral implant. Patients were divided into two groups: those who received UCS prosthesis (Group-1: 54 patients) and those who received CMP prosthesis (Group-2: 42 patients).The most frequent diagnosis was osteosarcoma. Age and gender were similar both groups. In Group-1, at a mean follow-up of 144 months, 37 prostheses were still in place. The overall Kaplan-Meier prosthetic survival rates were 79% at five and 62 % at ten years. Most of failures were long term complications. Aseptic loosening was the primary cause of late prosthetic failure. On Cox regression analysis, prosthetic stem diameter under 13mm was a significant negative prognostic factor for prosthetic survival (p=0.016). In Group-2, at a mean follow-up of 84 months, 36 prostheses were still in place. The overall rate of CMP prosthesis survival was 86% at 5 years. All complications were during the first postoperative year, being femoral fracture the main revision cause. The patients who retained the prosthesis had mainly good or excellent MSTS functional results in both groups.
Since high levels of urokinase-type plasminogen activation system have been associated with cancer metastasis, purpose of this study was to investigate its expression in patients with giant cell tumor and the relationship with outcome.
Clinical and radiographic follow-up evaluation was performed and all kind of femoral fractures and incidental perforations during the surgery and within the first year after were analysed.
Six fractures occurred during the first year. Four patients of the femoral incidental perforation group suffered a complete diaphyseal fracture at the perforation level. No patient with a diaphyseal femoral crack suffered a complete diaphyseal fracture. Two additional complete fractures occurred during the first year without previous intraoperative complication. Multivariate analysis showed the risk factors for femoral fractures during or after revision to be grater according to preoperative deficiency of the femoral bone stock, or the presence of an intraoperative femoral perforation. Vertical cracks, surgical approach, removal of a cemented or uncemented stem as well as design of the implanted stem showed no difference regarding this complication.