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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 6 | Pages 696 - 701
1 Jun 2023
Kurisunkal V Morris G Kaneuchi Y Bleibleh S James S Botchu R Jeys L Parry MC

Aims

Intra-articular (IA) tumours around the knee are treated with extra-articular (EA) resection, which is associated with poor functional outcomes. We aim to evaluate the accuracy of MRI in predicting IA involvement around the knee.

Methods

We identified 63 cases of high-grade sarcomas in or around the distal femur that underwent an EA resection from a prospectively maintained database (January 1996 to April 2020). Suspicion of IA disease was noted in 52 cases, six had IA pathological fracture, two had an effusion, two had prior surgical intervention (curettage/IA intervention), and one had an osseous metastasis in the proximal tibia. To ascertain validity, two musculoskeletal radiologists (R1, R2) reviewed the preoperative imaging (MRI) of 63 consecutive cases on two occasions six weeks apart. The radiological criteria for IA disease comprised evidence of tumour extension within the suprapatellar pouch, intercondylar notch, extension along medial/lateral retinaculum, and presence of IA fracture. The radiological predictions were then confirmed with the final histopathology of the resected specimens.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 94 - 94
1 Dec 2022
Lazarides A Novak R Burke Z Gundavda M Ghert M Rose P Houdek M Wunder JS Ferguson P Griffin A Tsoi K
Full Access

Radiation induced sarcoma of bone is a rare but challenging disease process associated with a poor prognosis. To date, series are limited by small patient numbers; data to inform prognosis and the optimal management for these patients is needed. We hypothesized that patients with radiation-induced pelvic bone sarcomas would have worse surgical, oncologic, and functional outcomes than patients diagnosed with primary pelvic bone sarcomas

This was a multi-institution, comparative cohort analysis. A retrospective chart review was performed of all patients diagnosed with a radiation-induced pelvic and sacral bone sarcoma between January 1st, 1985 and January 1st, 2020 (defined as a histologically confirmed bone sarcoma of the pelvis in a previously irradiated field with a minimum 3-year interval between radiation and sarcoma diagnosis). We also identified a comparison group including all patients diagnosed with a primary pelvic osteosarcoma/spindle cell sarcoma of bone (i.e. eligible for osteosarcoma-type chemotherapy) during the same time interval. The primary outcome measure was disease-free and overall survival.

We identified 85 patients with primary osteosarcoma of the pelvis (POP) and 39 patients with confirmed radiation induced sarcoma of the bony pelvis (RISB) undergoing surgical resection. Patients with RISB were older than patients with POP (50.5 years vs. 36.5 years, p67.7% of patients with POP underwent limb salvage as compared to 77% of patients with RISB; the type of surgery was not different between groups (p=.0.24). There was no difference in the rate of margin positive surgery for RISB vs. POP (21.1% vs. 14.1%, p=0.16). For patients undergoing surgical resection, the rate of surgical complications was high, with more RISB patients experiencing complications (79.5%) than POP patients (64.7%); this approached statistical significance (p=0.09).

15.4% of patients with RISB died perioperative period (within 90 days of surgery) as compared to 3.5% of patients with POP (p= 0.02). For patients undergoing surgical resection, 5-year OS was significantly worse for patients with RISB vs. POP (27.3% vs. 47.7%, p=0.02). When considering only patients without metastatic disease at presentation, a significant difference in 5-year survival remains for patients with RISB vs. POP (28.6% vs. 50%, p=0.03) was a trend towards poorer 5-year DFS for patients with RISB vs. POP (30% vs. 47.5%), though this did not achieve statistical significance (p=0.09).

POP and RISB represent challenging disease processes and the oncologic outcomes are similarly poor between the two; however, the disease course for patients with RISB appears to be worse overall. While surgery can result in a favorable outcome for a small subset of patients, surgical treatment is fraught with complications.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Nov 2022
Khan S Kapoor L Kumar V
Full Access

Abstract

Background

Reconstruction following resection of sarcomas of the upper extremity with methods described in the prevalent literature may not be possible in few selected cases. We describe Surgical Phocomelia or Phoco-reduction as a method of limb salvage in such cases of extensive sarcomas of the upper limb with its functional and oncological outcomes.

Methods

Evaluation of functional and oncological outcomes was performed for 11 patients who underwent surgical phocomelia or phocoreduction for extensive sarcomas of the upper limb between 2010 and 2019.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 2 | Pages 290 - 296
1 Feb 2022
Gosheger G Ahrens H Dreher P Schneider KN Deventer N Budny T Heitkötter B Schulze M Theil C

Aims

Iliosacral sarcoma resections have been shown to have high rates of local recurrence (LR) and poor overall survival. There is also no universal classification for the resection of pelvic sarcomas invading the sacrum. This study proposes a novel classification system and analyzes the survival and risk of recurrence, when using this system.

Methods

This is a retrospective analysis of 151 patients (with median follow-up in survivors of 44 months (interquartile range 12 to 77)) who underwent hemipelvectomy with iliosacral resection at a single centre between 2007 and 2019. The proposed classification differentiates the extent of iliosacral resection and defines types S1 to S6 (S1 resection medial and parallel to the sacroiliac joint, S2 resection through the ipsilateral sacral lateral mass to the neuroforamina, S3 resection through the ipsilateral neuroforamina, S4 resection through ipsilateral the spinal canal, and S5 and S6 contralateral sacral resections). Descriptive statistics and the chi-squared test were used for categorical variables, and the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis were performed.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 9 | Pages 602 - 610
24 Sep 2021
Tsoi KM Gokgoz N Darville-O'Quinn P Prochazka P Malekoltojari A Griffin AM Ferguson PC Wunder JS Andrulis IL

Aims

Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) are used for prognostication and monitoring in patients with carcinomas, but their utility is unclear in sarcomas. The objectives of this pilot study were to explore the prognostic significance of cfDNA and investigate whether tumour-specific alterations can be detected in the circulation of sarcoma patients.

Methods

Matched tumour and blood were collected from 64 sarcoma patients (n = 70 samples) prior to resection of the primary tumour (n = 57) or disease recurrence (n = 7). DNA was isolated from plasma, quantified, and analyzed for cfDNA. A subset of cases (n = 6) underwent whole exome sequencing to identify tumour-specific alterations used to detect ctDNA using digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR).


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 3 | Pages 553 - 561
1 Mar 2021
Smolle MA Leithner A Kapper M Demmer G Trost C Bergovec M Windhager R Hobusch GM

Aims

The aims of the study were to analyze differences in surgical and oncological outcomes, as well as quality of life (QoL) and function in patients with ankle sarcomas undergoing three forms of surgical treatment, minor or major limb salvage surgery (LSS), or amputation.

Methods

A total of 69 patients with ankle sarcomas, treated between 1981 and 2017 at two tumour centres, were retrospectively reviewed (mean age at surgery: 46.3 years (SD 22.0); 31 females (45%)). Among these 69 patients 25 were analyzed prospectively (mean age at latest follow-up: 61.2 years (SD 20.7); 11 females (44%)), and assessed for mobility using the Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS-M; for amputees only), the Toronto Extremity Salvage Score (TESS), and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Activity Score. Individual QoL was evaluated in these 25 patients using the five-level EuroQol five-dimension (EQ-5D-5L) and Fragebogen zur Lebenszufriedenheit/Questions on Life Satisfaction (FLZ).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 62 - 62
1 Mar 2021
Lee J Perera J Trottier ER Tsoi K Hopyan S
Full Access

Paediatric bone sarcomas around the knee are often amenable to either endoprosthetic reconstruction or rotationplasty. Cosmesis and durability dramatically distinguish these two options, although patient-reported functional satisfaction has been similar among survivors. However, the impact on oncological and surgical outcomes for these approaches has not been directly compared.

We retrospectively reviewed all wide resections for bone sarcoma of the distal femur or proximal tibia that were reconstructed either with an endoprosthesis or by rotationplasty at our institution between June 2004 and December 2014 with a minimum two year follow-up. Pertinent demographic information, surgical and oncological outcomes were reviewed. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meier method with statistical significance set at p<0.05.

Thirty eight patients with primary sarcomas around the knee underwent wide resection and either endoprosthetic reconstruction (n=19) or rotationplasty (n=19). Groups were comparable in terms of demographic parameters and systemic tumour burden at presentation. We found that selection of endoprosthetic reconstruction versus rotationplasty did not impact overall survival for the entire patient cohort but was significant in subgroup analysis. Two-year overall survival was 86.7% and 85.6% in the endoprosthesis and rotationplasty groups, respectively (p=0.33). When only patients with greater than 90% chemotherapy-induced necrosis were considered, overall survival was significantly better in the rotationplasty versus endoprosthesis groups (100% vs. 72.9% at two years, p=0.013). Similarly, while event-free survival was not affected by reconstruction method (60.2% vs. 73.3% at two years for endoprosthesis vs rotationplasty, p=0.27), there was a trend towards lower local recurrence in rotationplasty patients (p=0.07). When surgical outcomes were considered, a higher complication rate was seen in patients that received an endoprosthesis compared to those who underwent rotationplasty. Including all reasons for re-operation, 78.9% (n=15) of the endoprosthesis patients required a minimum of one additional surgery compared with only 26.3% (n=5) among rotationplasty patients (p=0.003). The most common reasons for re-operation in endoprosthesis patients were wound breakdown/infection (n=6), limb length discrepancy (n=6) and periprosthetic fracture (n=2). Excluding limb length equalisation procedures, the average time to re-operation in this patient population was 5.6 months (range 1 week to 23 months). Similarly, the most common reason for a secondary procedure in rotationplasty patients was wound breakdown/infection, although only two patients experienced this complication. Average time to re-operation in this group was 23.8 months (range 5 to 49 months).

Endoprosthetic reconstruction and rotationplasty are both viable limb-salvage options following wide resection of high-grade bony sarcomas located around the knee in the paediatric population. Endoprosthetic reconstruction is associated with a higher complication rate and may negatively impact local recurrence. Study of a larger number of patients is needed to determine whether the reconstructive choice affects survival.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 38 - 38
1 Aug 2020
Mattei J Alshaygy I Basile G Griffin A Wunder JS Ferguson P
Full Access

Sarcomas generally metastasize to the lung, while extra-pulmonary metastases are rare. However, they may occur more frequently in certain histological sub-types. Bone metastases from bone and soft tissue sarcomas account for a significant number of extra-pulmonary disease. Resection of lung metastases is widely accepted as therapeutic option to improve the survival of oligometastatic patients but there is currently no literature supporting curative surgical management of sarcoma bone metastases. Most are treated on a case-by-case basis, following multidisciplinary tumour boards recommendations. One study reported some success in controlling bone metastases using radiofrequency ablation. Our goal was to assess the impact of curative resection of bone metastases from soft tissue and bone sarcomas on oncologic outcomes. Extensive review of literature was done to evaluate epidemiological and outcomes of bone metastases in sarcoma. We examined our prospective database for all cases of bone metastases from sarcoma treated with surgical resection between 1990 and 2016. Epidemiology, pathology, metastatic status upon diagnosis, type of secondary relapses and their treatments were recorded. Overall survival and disease-free survival were calculated and compared to literature. Thirty-five patients were included (18 men, 17 women) with a mean age of 46 years. Fifteen were soft tissue (STS) and 20 were bone (BS) sarcomas. Most STS were fibrosarcomas, leiomyosarcomas or UPS while chondrosarcomas and osteosarcomas were the most frequent BS. Nine (60%) STS were grade 3, 4 (27%) grade 2 and one grade 1 (3%). Eight (23%) were metastatic upon diagnosis (6 lungs, 3 bone). Treatment of the primary tumour included wide excision with reconstruction and (neo)-adjuvant therapies as required. Margins were negative in 32 cases and micro-positive in 3 cases. Amputation occurred in 6 (17%) cases. Primary lung metastases were treated by thoracotomy and primary bone metastases by wide excision. First relapse occurred in bone in 19 cases (54%), lungs and bone in 7 cases, 5 in lungs and 4 in soft-tissues. Lung metastases were treated by thoracotomy and chemotherapy in 3 cases, chemotherapy alone in the remaining cases. Bone metastases were treated by wide resection-reconstruction in 24 cases, extensive curettage in 4. Soft tissue relapses were re-excised in 4 patients. Two amputations were required. All margins were negative except for the 4 treated by curettage. Fourteen second relapses occurred in bone, 7 were radically-excised and 2 curetted. At last follow-up, 6 patients were alive (overall survival of 17%), with a mean survival of 57 months, a median overall survival of 42.5 months and a median disease-free survival (DFS) of 17 months. Overall survival was 17%, compared to an 11% 10-year survival previously reported in metastatic sarcomas. Median disease-free survival was better in this study, compared to 10 months in literature, so as median OS (42.5 months vs 15). Three patients were alive with no evidence of disease. DFS, OS and median survival seemed to be improved by bone metastases wide excision and even if several recurrences occur, curative surgery with adjuvant therapies should be considered


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Aug 2020
Basile G Alshaygy I Mattei J Griffin A Ferguson P Wunder JS
Full Access

Lymph node metastasis are a rare occurrence in soft tissue sarcomas of the extremity, arising in less than 5% of patients. Few studies have evaluated the prognosis and survival of patients with a lymph node metastasis. Early reports compared lymph node involvement to lung metastasis, while others suggested a slightly better outcome. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of lymph node metastasis on patient survival and to investigate the histologic and clinical features associated with lymph node involvement.

A retrospective review was done of the prospectively collected soft tissue sarcoma database at our institution. Two thousand forty-five patients had surgery for soft tissue sarcoma of an extremity between January 1986 and August 2017. Included patients either presented with a synchronous lymph node metastasis or were diagnosed with a lymph node metastasis after their initial treatment. Demographic, treatment, and outcome data for patients with lymph node involvement were obtained from the clinical and radiographic records.

Lymph node metastases were identified as palpable adenopathy by physical examination and were further characterized on cross-sectional imaging by computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. All cases were confirmed by pathologic examination of biopsy specimens. A pathologist with expertise in sarcoma determined the histologic type and graded tumors as 1, 2, or 3.

One hundred eighteen patients with a mean age of 55.7 (SD=18.9) were included in our study. Seventy-two (61.3%) out of 119 patients were male. Thirty six patients (57.1%) had lymph node involvement at diagnosis. The mean follow-up from the date of the first surgery was 56.3 months. The most common histological diagnoses were Malignant fibrous histiocytoma (35) and liposarcoma (12). Ninety eight patients (89%) underwent surgical treatment of the lymph node metastasis while 21 (17.6%) were treated with chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. The mean survival was 52.6 months (range 1–307).

Our results suggest that patients with a lymph node metastasis have a better prognosis than previously described. Their overall survival is superior to patients diagnosed with lung metastasis. A signifant proportion of patients may expect long term survival after surgical excision of lymph node metastasis. Furthermore, our study also indicates that different histological subtypes such as liposarcoma or malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) may also be responsible for lymph node metastasis. Additional studies to further improve the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma nodal metastasis are warranted.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 6 | Pages 788 - 794
1 Jun 2020
Kiiski J Parry MC Le Nail L Sumathi V Stevenson JD Kaartinen IS Jeys LM Laitinen MK

Aims

Survival rates and local control after resection of a sarcoma of the pelvis compare poorly to those of the limbs and have a high incidence of complications. The outcome for patients who need a hindquarter amputation (HQA) to treat a pelvic sarcoma is poor. Our aim was to evaluate the patient, tumour, and reconstructive factors that affect the survival of the patients who undergo HQA for primary or recurrent pelvic sarcoma.

Methods

We carried out a retrospective review of all sarcoma patients who had undergone a HQA in a supraregional sarcoma unit between 1996 and 2018. Outcomes included oncological, surgical, and survival characteristics.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1518 - 1523
1 Nov 2018
Dean BJF Branford-White H Giele H Critchley P Cogswell L Athanasou N Gibbons CLM

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate the surgical management and outcome of patients with an acral soft-tissue sarcoma of the hand or foot.

Patients and Methods

We identified 63 patients with an acral soft-tissue sarcoma who presented to our tertiary referral sarcoma service between 2000 and 2016. There were 35 men and 28 women with a mean age of 49 years (sd 21). Of the 63 sarcomas, 27 were in the hands and 36 in the feet. The commonest subtypes were epithelioid sarcoma in the hand (n = 8) and synovial sarcoma in the foot (n = 11).


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 6 | Pages 798 - 805
1 Jun 2018
Zhang Y Guo W Tang X Yang R Ji T Yang Y Wang Y Wei R

Aims

The sacrum is frequently invaded by a pelvic tumour. The aim of this study was to review our experience of treating this group of patients and to identify the feasibility of a new surgical classification in the management of these tumours.

Patients and Methods

We reviewed 141 patients who, between 2005 and 2014, had undergone surgical excision of a pelvic tumour with invasion of the sacrum.

In a new classification, pelvisacral (Ps) I, II, and III resections refer to a sagittal osteotomy through the ipsilateral wing of the sacrum, through the sacral midline, or lateral to the contralateral sacral foramina, respectively. A Ps a resection describes a pelvic osteotomy through the ilium and a Ps b resection describes a concurrent resection of the acetabulum with osteotomies performed through the pubis and ischium or the pubic symphysis. Within each type, surgical approaches were standardized to guide resection of the tumour.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 2 | Pages 262 - 268
1 Feb 2018
Puri A Ranganathan P Gulia A Crasto S Hawaldar R Badwe RA

Aims

A single-centre prospective randomized trial was conducted to investigate whether a less intensive follow-up protocol would not be inferior to a conventional follow-up protocol, in terms of overall survival, in patients who have undergone surgery for sarcoma of the limb. Initial short-term results were published in 2014.

Patients and Methods

The primary objective was to show non-inferiority of a chest radiograph (CXR) group compared with a CT scan group, and of a less frequent (six-monthly) group than a more frequent (three-monthly) group, in two-by-two comparison. The primary outcome was overall survival and the secondary outcome was a recurrence-free survival. Five-year survival was compared between the CXR and CT scan groups and between the three-monthly and six-monthly groups. Of 500 patients who were enrolled, 476 were available for follow-up. Survival analyses were performed on a per-protocol basis (n = 412).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 39 - 39
1 Nov 2016
Vallières M Freeman C Zaki A Turcotte R Hickeson M Skamene S Jeyaseelan K Hathout L Serban M Xing S Powell T Goulding K Seuntjens J Levesque I El Naqa I
Full Access

This is quite an innovative study that should lead to a multicentre validation trial. We have developed an FDG-PET/MRI texture-based model for the prediction of lung metastases (LM) in newly diagnosed patients with soft-tissue sarcomas (STSs) using retrospective analysis. In this work, we assess the model performance using a new prospective STS cohort. We also investigate whether incorporating hypoxia and perfusion biomarkers derived from FMISO-PET and DCE-MRI scans can further enhance the predictive power of the model.

A total of 66 patients with histologically confirmed STSs were used in this study and divided into two groups: a retrospective cohort of 51 patients (19 LM) used for training the model, and a prospective cohort of 15 patients (two patients with LM, one patient with bone metastases and suspicious lung nodules) for testing the model. In the training phase, a model of four texture features characterising tumour sub-region size and intensity heterogeneities was developed for LM prediction from pre-treatment FDG-PET and MRI scans (T1-weighted, T2-weighted with fat saturation) of the retrospective cohort, using imbalance-adjusted bootstrap statistical resampling and logistic regression multivariable modeling. In the testing phase, this multivariable model was applied to predict the distant metastasis status of the prospective cohort. The predictive power of the obtained model response was assessed using the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC). In the exploratory phase of the study, we extracted two heterogeneity metrics from the prospective cohort: the area under the intensity-volume histogram of pre-treatment DCE-MRI volume transfer constant parametric maps and FMISO-PET hypoxia maps (AU-IVH-Ktrans, AU-IVH-FMISO). The impact of the addition of these two individual metrics to the texture-based model response obtained in the testing phase was first investigated using Spearman's correlation (rs), and lastly using logistic regression and leave-one-out cross-validation (LOO-CV) to account for overfitting bias.

First, the texture-based model reached an AUC of 0.94, a sensitivity of 1, a specificity of 0.83 and an accuracy of 0.87 when tested in the prospective cohort. In the exploratory phase, the addition of AU-IVH-FMISO did not improve predictive power, yielding a correlation of rs = −0.42 (p = 0.12) with lung metastases, and a relative change in validation AUC of 0% in comparison with the texture-based model response alone in LOO-CV experiments. In contrast, the addition of AU-IVH-Ktrans improved predictive power, yielding a correlation of rs = −0.54 (p = 0.04) with lung metastases, and a change in validation AUC of +10%.

Our results demonstrate that texture-based models extracted from pre-treatment FDG-PET and MRI anatomical scans could be successfully used to predict distant metastases in STS cancer. Our results also suggest that the addition of perfusion heterogeneity metrics may contribute to improving model prediction performance.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 4, Issue 9 | Pages 154 - 162
1 Sep 2015

Objective

Clinical studies of patients with bone sarcomas have been challenged by insufficient numbers at individual centres to draw valid conclusions. Our objective was to assess the feasibility of conducting a definitive multi-centre randomised controlled trial (RCT) to determine whether a five-day regimen of post-operative antibiotics, in comparison to a 24-hour regimen, decreases surgical site infections in patients undergoing endoprosthetic reconstruction for lower extremity primary bone tumours.

Methods

We performed a pilot international multi-centre RCT. We used central randomisation to conceal treatment allocation and sham antibiotics to blind participants, surgeons, and data collectors. We determined feasibility by measuring patient enrolment, completeness of follow-up, and protocol deviations for the antibiotic regimens.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 30 - 30
1 Jul 2014
McGoldrick N Butler J Sheehan S Dudeney S O'Toole G
Full Access

The purpose of this study is to present a series of soft tissue sarcomas requiring complex vascular reconstructions, and to describe their management and outcomes. Soft tissue sarcomas are rare mesodermal malignancies accounting for approximately 1% of all cancers diagnosed annually. Sarcomas involving the pelvis and extremities are of particular interest to the orthopaedic surgeon. Tumours that encase and invade large calibre vascular structures present a major surgical challenge in terms of safety of excision with acceptability of surgical margins. Technical advances in the fields of both orthopaedic and vascular surgery have resulted in a trend towards limb salvage with vascular reconstruction in preference to amputation. Limb-salvage surgery is now feasible due to the variety of reconstructive options available to the surgeon. Nevertheless, surgery with concomitant vascular reconstruction is associated with higher rates of complications including infection and amputation. We present a case series of soft tissue sarcomas with vascular compromise, requiring resection and vascular reconstruction. We treated four patients (n = 4, three females, and one male) with soft tissue masses, which were found to involve local vascular structures. Histology revealed leiomyosarcoma (n = 2) and alveolar soft part sarcomas (n = 2). Both synthetic graft and autogenous graft (long saphenous vein) techniques were utilised. Arterial reconstruction was undertaken in all cases. Venous reconstruction was performed in one case. One patient required graft thrombectomy at one month post-operatively for thrombosis. We present a series of complex tumour cases with concomitant vascular reconstructions drawn from our institution's experience as a national tertiary referral sarcoma service


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 106 - 106
1 Jul 2014
Salerno M Avnet S Bonuccelli G Eramo A De Maria R Gambarotti M Gamberi G Baldini N
Full Access

Summary

Starting from human musculoskeletal sarcomas, we isolated a subset of cells that display cancer stem cell properties. The control of culture conditions is crucial to enhance the isolation of this cell population.

Introduction

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) have emerged as the real responsible for the development, chemoresistance, and metastatic spread of different human cancers, including musculoskeletal sarcomas. However, unlike most leukemias and solid tumors, so far, data on musculoskeletal sarcomas refer to CSCs obtained from established cell lines, and only a few authors have reported on the isolation of CSCs from tissue samples [1-7]. Reasonably due to some peculiar features of mesenchymal tumors, including the lack of unique surface markers that identify tumor progenitors, there are still partial clues on the existence of a CSC population in these cancers. Here, we report the identification of putative CSCs in musculoskeletal sarcomas using the most general accepted isolation method, the sphere culture system. Accordingly to recent reports, we also analyzed the effects of reduced oxygen availability on the behavior of sarcoma CSCs.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 2, Issue 6 | Pages 2 - 8
1 Dec 2013
Jones R Wood D

This article provides an overview of the role of genomics in sarcomas and describes how new methods of analysis and comparative screening have provided the potential to progress understanding and treatment of sarcoma. This article reviews genomic techniques, the evolution of the use of genomics in cancer, the current state of genomic analysis, and also provides an overview of the medical, social and economic implications of recent genomic advances.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 139 - 139
1 Sep 2012
Filomeno PA Dayan V Kandel RA Wang X Felizardo TC Salomeh J Filomeno AE Medin J Keating A Ferguson P
Full Access

Purpose

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are an attractive choice for regenerative medicine. We previously showed that MSCs enhance wound healing in animals after radiotherapy. The effect of MSCs on tumor growth is not well understood. The potential use of MSCs to enhance wound healing after radiotherapy (RT) and resection of soft tissue sarcoma (STS) is dependent on a satisfactory safety profile to ensure that tumor proliferation does not occur and recurrence is not increased.

Method

Primary cell lines (human myxofibrosarcoma and undifferentiated sarcoma) derived from sarcoma bearing patients and a commercialized human fibrosarcoma cell line (HT1080) were used. Cell line proliferation assay after co-culture with MSCs was done using flow cytometry (CFSE) and bioluminescence emission (BLI) (using eGFP/Fluc transduced cell lines).

Five xenograft models were developed with NOD/SCID gc-null mice (n=164) harbouring primary tissue lines obtained from patients biopsies (myxofibrosarcoma and three pleomorphic undifferentiated sarcoma [PUS A, B and C]) and a a fibrosarcoma cell line previously transduced with eGFP/Fluc. Tumors were passaged to three mouse generations before a tissue line was established and the model was then used. For the fibrosarcoma model, eGFP/Fluc HT1080 were injected under the dorsal skin. When tumors reached 1cm in diameter, they received localized RT and 48hr later were resected. MSCs (n=82) or medium alone (n=82) was injected subcutaneously adjacent to the wound after tumor resection. Histological and in vivo BLI analysis were performed 3 and 12 weeks after surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XL | Pages 155 - 155
1 Sep 2012
Ruggieri P Pala E Mavrogenis AF Romantini M Manfrini M Mercuri M
Full Access

Introduction

Historically, amputation or rotationplasty were the treatment of choice in skeletally immature patients. The introduction of expandable endoprostheses in the late 1980s offered the advantages of limb-salvage and limb length equality at skeletal maturity and a promising alternative with improved cosmetic results and immediate weight bearing.

Objective

to describe the Rizzoli experience in reconstruction with three different types of expandable prostheses in growing children with malignant bone tumors of the femur, assess the outcome of limb salvage in these patients, analyze survival and complications related to these prostheses used over time.