Deep periprostheses infection is a devastating complication that occurred in 8 to 20% of patients treated by en bloc resection and prosthetic reconstruction for bone sarcomas. The systemic safety of high dose vancomycin loaded spacer has been investigated but rarely the elution of vancomycin in vivo. The aim of the study is to evaluate the elution of vancomycin into the site of the excision arthroplasty to see if effective bactericidal activity can be obtained.
Antibiotic-loaded methylmethacrylate cement beads were prepared by adding 4 g of vancomycin powder to a 40 g pack of Palacos R cement in the operative place immediately before the operation. We used 4 G vancomycin per batch of 40 G cement and generally used 2 to 4 batches of cement in one spacer depending of the size and length of resection. The average dose of vancomycin was 7.5 G (4–14.5). The wounds were closed with absorbable mono-filaments sutures over one suction drain. Intravenous antibiotics excluding vancomycin were given for 6 to 24 weeks. Patients biological values and the concentrations of vancomycin in the blood and in the aliquots of suction drainage were checked daily until removal of drain. Vancomycin was measured by fluorescent polarization immunoassay on the AxSYM analyzer (Abbott).
d1 :725μg/ml d2 :510 μg/ml d3 :346 μg/ml on day 10, its remained over 35μg/ml vancomycin in the aliquot of the drain These results should be compared to the bactericidal concentration of vancomycin for staphylococcus aureus:10 to 20 μg/ml for usual organisms, 20 to 40 for resistant organisms. We had no reported cases of allergy, toxicity or intolerance.
Additional studies are needed, with longer follow-up to evaluate the clinical efficacy of this method.
Desmoid tumour is an histological benign tumour. Nevertheless, peri-scapular relapses can decrease the function and intra thoracic progression threaten life. To prevent these complications, damaging treatment (radiotherapy, amputation) are sometimes proposed. To precise the optimal indications of treatment, we reviewed our cases.
Treatment was adapted to each patient, in function of age, history of illness, and risks of spontaneous evolution. En bloc extratumoral resection was performed each time, when it didn’t expose to heavy functional risk (8). The other patients were treated by contaminated resection, but never invaliding. 4 patients received pre or/and post-operative chemotherapy. 1 received Interferon alpha, and 7 tamoxifen.
Congenital fibrosarcoma (CFS) is a rare tumor most often affecting extremities of babies. Considering age, surgery of primary is preferred. Nevertheless amputation rate remains high. Preoperative chemotherapy (CT) role must be emphasised. We present 3 cases receiving preoperative CT. Patients and methods in 1985, we treated a 3 months old girl for CFS of the thigh. To avoid amputation, preoperative CT (3 Ifosfamide- Vincristine- Actinomycine D) was performed leading to complete radiological and histological response. She benefited of conservative surgery She is in first complete remission 23 years later. In September 1999, a 3 ½ y old boy with recurrent l buttock CFS operated elsewhere twice (6 months old, 2 years old), received preoperative chemotherapy with good clinical and radiological response. “En-bloc” extra tumoral resection was performed. Histology showed viable tumoral cells. We completed treatment by chemotherapy. In 01/ 2003 bilateral pulmonary metastases occurred leading to surgery and chemotherapy. In 09/ 2003 a new local recurrence appeared treated by surgery and postoperative chemotherapy. From this time, he received Alpha interferon. He is in complete remission for 6 years. In 12/2005, a 14 y old girl, with local recurrence of CFS, treated elsewhere at the age of 5 months by partial surgery and chemotherapy (remained in remission for 13 years)was admitted. Since this time, she recurred locally despite resections and multiple lines of chemotherapy, but without metastasising. She was amputated in 2008.
The stiffness of the shoulder can result of many illness. Nevertheless, we observed a severe stiffness of the scapulo thoracic space only in fibromatosis. To precise the real diagnostic value of this symptom, we examined patients with different diseases of shoulder (tumoral and non tumoral). The passive mobility of the shoulder of 11 patients with peri-scapular fibromatosis was compared to the mobility of those in 50 patients with non tumoral diseases of shoulder (arthritis and rotator cuff pathology), 50 peri-scapular soft tissues tumours, and 100 patients with primitive or secondary malignancies of humerus or scapula.
After treatment of fibromatosis, 9/11 patients are in complete remission and the mobility of their scapulo thoracic space restored. 2 patients are in stable disease and one suffers of a residual stiffness of the scapulothoracic space. We conclude that the frozen scapulo thoracic is a specific symptom of peri scapulo thoracic fibromatosis. The restoration of the mobility of the scapulo thoracic after cure of the desmoid tumour confirms its specific role and represents a good marker of the tumoral evolution.
Case reports: Case n° 1 was a 16-year-old girl who presented a Ewing sarcoma involving the left iliopubic ramus. No other foci could be identified on the plain x-rays, scintigraphy and bone computed tomography. Preopeartive magnetic resonance imaging revealed a metastatic focus in the neck of the homolateral femur. The two foci were resected after preoperative chemotherapy: resection of the left hemi-pelvis and resection of the upper potion of the femur with replacement with a pelvic prosthesis and and massive prosthesis for the proximal femur. Eight years later, the patient has remained in complete primary remission, consulting for orthopedic gait problems related to prosthetic loosening. Case n° 2 was a 13-year-old boy who presented an Ewing sarcoma of the upper tibial metaphysic. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging revealed three other metastatic localizations in the homolateral femur. Bifocal resection of the tibia and the femur was performed with implantation of an active growth prosthesis. Chemotherapy was continued. Seven years later, the patient remains in primary complete remission. Lengthening the prosthesis has enabled equivalent growth for the two limbs. The patient has a normal life style excepting contact sports which are prohibited. Case n° 3 was a 17-year-old boy who presented a voluminous Ewing sarcoma of the right pelvis. Search for extension revealed a unique metastasis in the fourth lumbar vertebra. The patient was given preoperative chemotherapy before resection of the pelvic tumor then two months later resection of the vertebral metastasis. The patient died 4.5 years later from a traffic accident. He had remained in complete remission. Discussion and conclusion: These three cases of complete long-term primary remission of patients with primary bone metastases show that like other bone sarcomas, eradication of all recognized bone metastases is essential for the prognosis of Ewing sarcoma.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the importance of the timing of surgery for disease-free survival (DFS). The increasing efficacy of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in Ewing’s sarcoma modifies the prognostic factors. In a recent monocentric study the classical prognostic value of size and location of the primary disappeared ( Seventy-five patients with an average age of 19 years (range 4 to 40) years with Ewing’s sarcoma of bone fulfilled the inclusion criteria for this study: localised tumour at first screening (CT of lungs + bone scan) and location of the tumour in resectional bones (limb, scapula, innominate, rib, maxilla, skull). Metastatic patients and vertebral locations were excluded. The patients received multi-drug chemotherapy and were treated by surgery and radiotherapy in cases of bad responders and/or marginal surgery. The histologic response was evaluated according to Picci’s criteria ( After a mean follow-up of 54 months, 41 patients were in first complete remission. Patients operated before the tenth week had a higher chance (68%) of first complete remission than patients operated later (DFS: 43%). The difference is significant (p<
0.03). Further analysis shows that the difference is due to late local control, which causes a dismal prognosis for bad responders. Local treatment must be performed early, especially when histologic response is incomplete or uncertain. Preoperative chemotherapy that is too long increases the risk of metastases in bad responders. These factors must be taken into account when analysing multicentre protocols.
A “hands-on” composite gives a similar functional result as a custom-made prosthesis and has a much better function than alternative techniques. Less expensive and more flexible than custom-made prostheses, it can be used even when no part of the iliac wing remains. The use of cement permits the adjunction of antibiotics needed for these complicated cases. After peri-acetabular resection for bone sarcoma, a reconstructive procedure is necessary to stabilize the hip, avoid limb discrepancy, and permit full weight bearing. This procedure needs to be easy to perform because resection of the area is time and blood consuming. This leads to the use of a “hands-on” composite prosthesis. Our reconstructive procedure uses a titanium cup with a long screw that is fixed in the remaining bone (sacrum or spine). When the cup is firmly fixed to the bone, the gap between the cup and bone is filled with cement loaded with antibiotics, and the polyethylene component is cemented on the innominate prosthesis. The femoral component of a usual hip total prosthesis is then implanted. Since 1990 we have used this reconstructive procedure in 50 patients, 27 with bone sarcomas involving the acetabulum (11 chondrosarcomas, 9 Ewing’s sarcomas and 7 other sarcomas) and 23 for metastatic disease. Thirty of these patients were already metastatic when operated. The average duration of the reconstructive procedure was 45 minutes. Walking started from the fourth to tenth day after operation, but full weight bearing was usually authorised after six weeks. Postoperative complications were frequent. Seven deep infections occurred, four required ablation of the prosthesis, and one would benefit from a saddle prosthesis. 33% of the patients had postoperative dislocation of the hip prosthesis and 13 patients had to be reoperated. Only two loosenings have been observed – one after deep infection and one after local recurrence in the sacral bone. Oncologic results: With a mean follow-up of five years, 28 patients died of disease and one from an unrelated disease. Four others with disease are still living. Seven local recurrences were observed (four in chondrosarcomas with a contaminated resection). The difficulty in obtaining wide margins explains the high rate of local recurrence (14 %). For patients with localised disease, the five-year overall survival rate is 75% and the five-year disease-free survival rate is 60%. According to the Society for Musculoskeletal Oncology criteria, orthopaedic results were excellent in 7 patients, good in 30, fair in 6, and bad in 6. The mean functional score of 46 patients who still have their prostheses is 83% with usually no pain, excellent acceptance, length discrepancy of less than 1 cm, average flexion of 100 degrees, and unlimited walking without support. We conclude that the rapidity and flexibility of this procedure are the positive aspects of this reconstructive technique. However, perfect positioning of the prosthesis remains difficult in a very large peri-acetabular resection. A computed guide is of great help to specify safe margins and prosthesis positioning. Longer follow-up is needed to ensure that the rate of late loosening will not be too high.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the importance of the timing of surgery for disease-free survival (DFS). The increasing efficacy of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in Ewing’s sarcoma modifies the prognostic factors. In a recent monocentric study the classical prognostic value of size and location of the primary disappeared ( Seventy-five patients with an average age of 19 years (range 4 to 40) years with Ewing’s sarcoma of bone fulfilled the inclusion criteria for this study: localised tumour at first screening (CT of lungs + bone scan) and location of the tumour in resectional bones (limb, scapula, innominate, rib, maxilla, skull). Metastatic patients and vertebral locations were excluded. The patients received multi-drug chemotherapy and were treated by surgery and radiotherapy in cases of bad responders and/or marginal surgery. The histologic response was evaluated according to Picci’s criteria ( After a mean follow-up of 54 months, 41 patients were in first complete remission. Patients operated before the tenth week had a higher chance (68%) of first complete remission than patients operated later (DFS: 43%). The difference is significant (p<
0.03). Further analysis shows that the difference is due to late local control, which causes a dismal prognosis for bad responders. Local treatment must be performed early, especially when histologic response is incomplete or uncertain. Preoperative chemotherapy that is too long increases the risk of metastases in bad responders. These factors must be taken into account when analysing multicentre protocols.
A “hands-on” composite gives a similar functional result as a custom-made prosthesis and has a much better function than alternative techniques. Less expensive and more flexible than custom-made prostheses, it can be used even when no part of the iliac wing remains. The use of cement permits the adjunction of antibiotics needed for these complicated cases. After periacetabular resection for bone sarcoma, a reconstructive procedure is necessary to stabilize the hip, avoid limb discrepancy, and permit full weight bearing. This procedure needs to be easy to perform because resection of the area is time and blood consuming. This leads to the use of a “hands-on” composite prosthesis. Our reconstructive procedure uses a titanium cup with a long screw that is fixed in the remaining bone (sacrum or spine). When the cup is firmly fixed to the bone, the gap between the cup and bone is filled with cement loaded with antibiotics, and the polyethylene component is cemented on the innominate prosthesis. The femoral component of a usual hip total prosthesis is then implanted. Since 1990 we have used this reconstructive procedure in 50 patients, 27 with bone sarcomas involving the acetabulum (11 chondrosarcomas, 9 Ewing’s sarcomas and 7 other sarcomas) and 23 for metastatic disease. Thirty of these patients were already metastatic when operated. The average duration of the reconstructive procedure was 45 minutes. Walking started from the fourth to tenth day after operation, but full weight bearing was usually authorised after six weeks. Postoperative complications were frequent. Seven deep infections occurred, four required ablation of the prosthesis, and one would benefit from a saddle prosthesis. 33% of the patients had postoperative dislocation of the hip prosthesis and 13 patients had to be reoperated. Only two loosenings have been observed – one after deep infection and one after local recurrence in the sacral bone. Oncologic results: With a mean follow-up of five years, 28 patients died of disease and one from an unrelated disease. Four others with disease are still living. Seven local recurrences were observed (four in chondrosarcomas with a contaminated resection). The difficulty in obtaining wide margins explains the high rate of local recurrence (14 %). For patients with localised disease, the five-year overall survival rate is 75% and the five-year disease-free survival rate is 60%. According to the Society for Musculoskeletal Oncology criteria, orthopaedic results were excellent in 7 patients, good in 30, fair in 6, and bad in 6. The mean functional score of 46 patients who still have their prostheses is 83% with usually no pain, excellent acceptance, length discrepancy of less than 1 cm, average flexion of 100 degrees, and unlimited walking without support. We conclude that the rapidity and flexibility of this procedure are the positive aspects of this reconstructive technique. However, perfect positioning of the prosthesis remains difficult in a very large periacetabular resection. A computed guide is of great help to specify safe margins and prosthesis positioning. Longer follow-up is needed to ensure that the rate of late loosening will not be too high.