Aims. There is a lack of evidence about the risk factors for
We investigated whether the presence of a pathological
fracture increased the risk of
Aims. The aim of this paper was to investigate the prognostic factors for
Benign aggressive tumors are common and can be debilitating for patients especially if they are in peri-articular regions or cause pathological fracture as is common for giant cell tumor of bone (GCT). Although GCT rarely metastasize, the literature reports many series with high rates of
Traditional staging systems for high grade osteosarcoma (Enneking, MSTS) are based largely on gross surgical margins and were developed before the widespread use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. It is now well known that both microscopic margins and chemotherapy are predictors of
To assess the clinical features, development of metastases, and survival rate of patients with
We analysed metastasis-free survival after
We have investigated the significance of
Introduction: Chondrosarcoma has always been treated with respect by oncology surgeons, given that it is relatively resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The importance of the adequacy of surgical resection margins has been previously reported, however, the aim of the study was to study the outcomes of surgery for Chondrosarcoma and determine the role of initial surgical margins and
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the
long-term outcome of patients with a sacral chordoma and the surgical
management of locally recurrent disease. Between October 1990 and August 2013 we operated on 54 consecutive
patients with a sacral chordoma. There were 34 men and 20 women
with a mean age of 60 years (25 to 86). The mean maximum diameter
of the tumour was 9.3 cm (3 to 20). The mean follow-up was 7.8 years (2 months to 23.4 years). The
disease-specific survival was 82% at five years, 57% at ten years
and 45% at 15 years. The local recurrence-free survival was 49%
at five years, 37% at ten years and 20% at 15 years. Local recurrence
occurred in 30 patients (56%) at a mean of 3.8 years (3 months to
13 years) post-operatively. Survival after the treatment of recurrence was 89% at two years,
56% at five years and 19% at ten years. Of nine patients who had
complete resection of a recurrence, one died after 72 months and
eight remain disease-free. Incomplete resection of recurrent disease
resulted in a survival of 54% at two years and 36% at five years. For 12 patients with a
Chondrosarcoma is treated with respect by oncology surgeons, given that it is relatively resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The aim was to study the outcomes of surgery for chondrosarcoma and determine the role of initial surgical margins and
The outcome for patients with Ewing's sarcoma recurrence is poor.
Background. Giant cell tumours of bone (GCT) are benign bone tumours with a locally aggressive character.
We retrospectively studied
Ewing Sarcoma is the second most common primary bone sarcoma in young patients, however, there remains geographical variation in the treatment of these tumours. All patients receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy and, in most cases, the soft tissue mass diminishes significantly in volume. Controversy surrounds whether to then treat the pre- or post-chemotherapy tumour volume. Many centres advocate either (1) resection of the pre-chemotherapy volume or (2) treatment of the pre-chemotherapy volume with radiation followed by resection of the post-chemotherapy volume. These approaches increase both the short and long-term morbidity for this young patient population. In this study, we retrospectively reviewed our experience resecting only the post-chemotherapy volume without the use of (neo)adjuvant radiotherapy. A retrospective analysis of all patients with Ewing Sarcoma treated at a tertiary orthopaedic oncology centre was conducted. All patients were treated as per the consensus opinion of the multidisciplinary tumour board. Demographic and oncological variables were collected from our institutional database. Presentation and re-staging MRI scans were reviewed to evaluate pre- and post-chemotherapy tumour volumes. Operative and pathology reports were utilized to determine the extent of the surgical resection. Outcome variables included
Two hundred and forty-eight high-grade central osteosarcomata were treated by amputation or disarticulation; in 5.2 per cent the tumour recurred at the amputation site. The following causes may be responsible for
Aim: To identify prognostic for patients who develop
Aims. Iliosacral sarcoma resections have been shown to have high rates of
Introduction.
Purpose. The main predictors in the literature of local control for patients operated on for a soft tissue sarcoma are age, local presentation status, depth, grade, size, surgical margins and radiation. However, due to the competing effect of death (patients who die are withdrawn from the risk of local recurrence), the influence of these predictors on the cumulative probabilities may have been misinterpreted so far. The objective of the study was to interpret the influence of known predictors of
Introduction and aims: Despite advances in local therapy, there is an ongoing risk of
We retrospectively compared the outcome after
the treatment of giant cell tumours of bone either with curettage alone
or with adjuvant cementation. Between 1975 and 2008, 330 patients
with a giant cell tumour were treated primarily by intralesional
curettage, with 84 (25%) receiving adjuvant bone cement in the cavity.
The
Purpose: Management of
We considered whether a positive margin occurring after resection of a soft-tissue sarcoma of a limb would affect the incidence of
Introduction. Current practice in the UK is to perform clinical follow up and CXR on patients with sarcomas with the use of cross-sectional imaging reserved for high clinical suspicion of recurrence. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of this policy by investigating patients who developed
Introduction: The Scottish Sarcoma network was established in 2004 to optimise the management of sarcoma patients in Scotland. This maintained three units, Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow, as designated Sarcoma centres. Aberdeen takes referrals from Tayside, Grampian and the Highlands and Islands. Soft tissue tumours are managed with surgical resection +/− radiotherapy. The surgical margin is paramount and thought to predict the risk of
Introduction: Current practice in the UK is to perform clinical follow up on patients with soft tissue sarcoma (STS) and only to request cross sectional imaging if there is clinical suspicion. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of this policy by investigating the patients who developed a
The purpose of our study was to identify possible risk factors of patients with GCT of the long bones after curettage and packing the bone cavity with bone cement or bone allografts. We retrospectively reviewed the records of 249 patients with GCT of the limbs treated at Musculoskeletal Oncology Department of our institution between 1990 and 2013, confirmed histologically and recorded in the Bone Tumor Registry. We reviewed 219 cases located in the lower limb and 30 of the upper limb. This series includes 135 females and 114 males, with mean age 32 years (ranging 5 to 80 yrs). According to Campanacci's grading system, 190 cases were stage 2, 48 cases stage 3, and 11 cases stage 1. Treatment was curettage (intralesional surgery). Local adjuvants, such as phenol and cement, were used in 185 cases; whereas in the remaining 64 cases the residual cavity was filled with allografts or autografts only. Oncological outcome shows 203 patients alive and continuously disease-free (CDF), 41 patients NED1 after treatment of
Introduction: Parosteal osteosarcoma is a rare, mostly low grade tumor arising from the surface of the bone. The aim of the study was to establish risk factors for
The development of
Purpose: To assess the functional outcome of patients who pre-operatively, were known to have sciatic nerve tumour involvement and proceeded to have nerve-preserving planned marginal excision with epineurectomy. Methods: We identified patients who had surgery between 1997 and 2004, for soft tissue sarcomas in the posterior thigh with known sciatic nerve involvement. During this period it was the practice of the senior authors (MG &
HG) to apply a nerve-preserving epineurectomy approach as part of their planned marginal excision of these tumours. The identified patients had their notes reviewed, and were contacted by post to complete a Toronto Extremity Severity Score (TESS) questionnaire to assess lower limb function in day-to-day life. Details of their presenting features, oncological work-up, surgical intervention and adjuvant therapy was established and correlated to the TESS score. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that a careful epineurectomy can preserve sciatic nerve function and allow tumour excision with no increase in
Giant cell tumour of bone (GCT) is a primary osteolytic neoplasm, histopathologically characterized by osteoclast-like giant cells and clinically characterized by local bone destruction and high recurrence rates. There is a need to identify risk factors for recurrence. In order to reduce the recurrence rate we initiated an international, multicenter, randomised phase II trial with adjuvantzoledronic acid as compared to standard care for high risk GCT patients. One hundred and sixteen GCT patients, treated at the LUMC from 1971 to 2006, with a minimal follow-up of a year, were retrospectively analysed for the following risk factors for
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. Results. In Vitro Proliferation Assay. For the flow cytometric proliferation assay, there was an increase in the doubling time after five days in the myxofibrosarcoma-MSCs co-culture system (140.4h) compared with controls (55.4 h, p<0.001). No significant differences were found in other cells lines. Lower BLI emission was found in co-cultured myxofibrosarcoma cells at the 3rd and 4th day compared with controls (p<0.01 and p<0.05 respectively). In Vivo Recurrence Assay. For mice bearing the fibrosarcoma cell line, in vivo BLI performed 3 weeks after surgery showed similar emission intensity in MSC-treated mice and controls while histological recurrence was significantly lower in MSC-treated animals (40%) than control (72%, p=0.045). For mice bearing the myxofibrosarcoma tissue line, histological recurrence at 12 weeks was similar in MSCs-treated animals and controls (p=0.44). Mice xenografted with pleomorphic undifferentiated sarcoma A and B did not develop
Aims.
Aims. The aim of this study was to investigate the
Aims. Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is a locally aggressive lesion that is difficult to treat as salvaging the joint can be associated with a high rate of
Aims. Current literature suggests that survival outcomes and
Aims. The aim of this study was to analyse a group of patients with
non-metastatic Ewing’s sarcoma at presentation and identify prognostic
factors affecting the development of
The aim of this study was to investigate the results of a series of cases from a single institution with respect to local disease control and patient survival to determine prognostic factors. Electronic patient records were reviewed on all patients with STS between February 1963 and January 2007. 2445 patients had over 30 types of STS. 1639 (67%) had not received any treatment prior to presentation, however, 770 patients (32%) had undergone a previous attempted excision. Survival analyses were done using Kaplan Meier and Cox regression analyses, however, for prognostic factor analysis, only patients presenting without prior treatment were included.Introduction
Methods
Aims. The aims of this study were to evaluate the efficacy of preoperative denosumab in achieving prospectively decided intention of therapy in operable giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) patients, and to document local recurrence-free survival (LRFS). Patients and Methods. A total of 44 patients received preoperative denosumab: 22 to facilitate curettage, 16 to facilitate resection, and six with intent of converting resection to curettage. There were 26 male and 18 female patients. The mean age was 27 years (13 to 47). Results. The mean number of denosumab treatments was five (2 to 7) per patient. In 42 of 44 patients (95%), denosumab helped to achieve prospectively decided intention. A total of 41 patients were available for follow-up at a mean follow-up of 34 months (24 to 48). There were 12
Overall cumulative patient survival was 58% at 5 years and 44% at 10 years. Locally recurrent disease occurred in 350 patients (14%), 204 patients (8%) presented with and 720 patients (30%) subsequently developed metastatic disease. Prognostic factors for locally recurrent disease were arm tumours (p=0.003, HR=0.3), hip tumours (p=0.01, HR=0.31), thigh tumours (p=0.002, HR=0.52), intralesional margins (p<
0.0001, HR=3.7), high grade tumours (p=0.03, HR=1.8), tumour size 3–6cm (p=0.04, HR=0.54) and tumour size 6–10cm (p=0.03, HR=0.63). Prognostic factors for patient survival were deep location (p=0.02, HR=1.6), high grade tumours (p<
0.0001, HR=4.7), intermediate grade tumours (p<
0.0001, HR=3.4), surgical margins (p=0.04), age at diagnosis (p<
0.0001, HR=1.02), size of tumour <
3cms (p=0.04, HR=0.29), 3–6cms (p<
0.0001, HR=0.41), 6–10cms (p=0.007, HR=0.63), no locally recurrent disease (p=0.0001, HR=0.59).
Opinion remains divided as to whether the development
of pathological fracture affects the prognosis of patients with
an osteosarcoma of the extremities. We conducted a comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis
of papers which reported the outcomes of osteosarcoma patients with
and without a pathological fracture. There were eight eligible papers
for final analysis which reported on 1713 patients, of whom 303
(17.7%) had a pathological fracture. The mean age for 1464 patients in
six studies was 23.2 years old (2 to 82). The mean follow-up for
1481 patients in seven studies was 90.1 months (6 to 240). The pooled estimates of
We hypothesised that the use of computer navigation-assisted
surgery for pelvic and sacral tumours would reduce the risk of an
intralesional margin. We reviewed 31 patients (18 men and 13 women)
with a mean age of 52.9 years (13.5 to 77.2) in whom computer navigation-assisted
surgery had been carried out for a bone tumour of the pelvis or
sacrum. There were 23 primary malignant bone tumours, four metastatic
tumours and four locally advanced primary tumours of the rectum.
The registration error when using computer navigation was <
1 mm
in each case. There were no complications related to the navigation,
which allowed the preservation of sacral nerve roots (n = 13), resection
of otherwise inoperable disease (n = 4) and the avoidance of hindquarter
amputation (n = 3). The intralesional resection rate for primary
tumours of the pelvis and sacrum was 8.7% (n = 2): clear bone resection
margins were achieved in all cases. At a mean follow-up of 13.1
months (3 to 34) three patients (13%) had developed a
Myxofibrosarcomas (MFSs) are malignant soft-tissue sarcomas characteristically
presenting as painless slowly growing masses in the extremities.
Locally infiltrative growth means that the risk of local recurrence
is high. We reviewed our experience to make recommendations about
resection strategies and the role of the multidisciplinary team
in the management of these tumours. Patients with a primary or recurrent MFS who were treated surgically
in our unit between 1997 and 2012 were included in the study. Clinical
records and imaging were reviewed. A total of 50 patients with a
median age of 68.4 years (interquartile range 61.6 to 81.8) were
included. There were 35 men; 49 underwent surgery in our unit.Aims
Patients and Methods
We evaluated the risk of late relapse and further
outcome in patients with soft-tissue sarcomas who were alive and event-free
more than five years after initial treatment. From our database
we identified 1912 patients with these pathologies treated between
1980 and 2006. Of these 1912 patients, 603 were alive and event-free
more than five years after initial treatment and we retrospectively
reviewed them. The mean age of this group was 48 years (4 to 94)
and 340 were men. The mean follow-up was 106 months (60 to 336).
Of the original cohort, 582 (97%) were alive at final follow-up.
The disease-specific survival was 96.4% (95% confidence interval
(CI) 94.4 to 98.3) at ten years and 92.9% (95% CI 89 to 96.8) at
15 years. The rate of late relapse was 6.3% (38 of 603). The ten-
and 15-year event-free rates were 93.2% (95% CI 90.8 to 95.7) and
86.1% (95% CI 80.2 to 92.1), respectively. Multivariate analysis
showed that tumour size and tumour grade remained independent predictors
of events. In spite of further treatment, 19 of the 38 patients
died of sarcoma. The three- and five-year survival rates after the
late relapse were 56.2% (95% CI 39.5 to 73.3) and 43.2% (95% CI
24.7 to 61.7), respectively, with a median survival time of 46 months.
Patients with soft-tissue sarcoma, especially if large, require
long-term follow-up, especially as they have moderate potential
to have their disease controlled. Cite this article:
The February 2024 Oncology Roundup. 360. looks at: Does primary tumour resection improve survival for patients with sarcomas of the pelvis with metastasis at diagnosis?; Proximal femur replacements for an oncologic indication offer a durable endoprosthetic reconstruction option: a 40-year experience; The importance of awaiting biopsy results in solitary pathological proximal femoral fractures: do we need to biopsy solitary pathological fractures?; Effect of radiotherapy on
Aims. The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential for achieving local and systemic control after
Aims. The scapula is a rare site for a primary bone tumour. Only a small number of series have studied patient outcomes after treatment. Previous studies have shown a high rate of recurrence, with functional outcomes determined by the preservation of the glenohumeral joint and deltoid. The purpose of the current study was to report the outcome of patients who had undergone tumour resection that included the scapula. Methods. We reviewed 61 patients (37 male, 24 female; mean age 42 years (SD 19)) who had undergone resection of the scapula. The most common resection was type 2 (n = 34) according to the Tikhoff-Linberg classification, or type S1A (n = 35) on the Enneking classification. Results. The ten-year disease-specific survival was 76%. High tumour grade (hazard ratio (HR) 4.27; p = 0.016) and a total resection of the scapula (HR 3.84; p = 0.015) were associated with worse survival. The ten-year metastasis-free and local recurrence-free survivals were 82% and 86%, respectively. Total scapular resection (HR 6.29; p = 0.004) was associated with metastatic disease and positive margins were associated with
Aims. Low-grade central osteosarcoma (LGCOS), a rare type of osteosarcoma, often has misleading radiological and pathological features that overlap with those of other bone tumours, thereby complicating diagnosis and treatment. We aimed to analyze the clinical, radiological, and pathological features of patients with LGCOS, with a focus on diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes. Methods. We retrospectively analyzed the medical records of 49 patients with LGCOS (Broder’s grade 1 to 2) treated between January 1985 and December 2017 in a single institute. We examined the presence of malignant features on imaging (periosteal reaction, cortical destruction, soft-tissue invasion), the diagnostic accuracy of biopsy, surgical treatment, and oncological outcome. Results. Based on imaging, 35 of 49 patients (71.4%) exhibited malignant features. Overall, 40 of 49 patients (81.6%) had undergone a biopsy before en-bloc resection: 27 of 40 patients (67.5%) were diagnosed on the first biopsy, which was more accurate when carried out by open rather than needle biopsy (91.3% vs 35.3% diagnostic accuracy, respectively; p < 0.001). Of the 40 patients treated by en-bloc resection, surgical margins were wide in 38 (95.0%) and marginal in two (5.0%). Furthermore, nine of 49 patients (18.4%) underwent curettage (intralesional margin) without previous biopsy. All patients with a positive margin developed