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
Impaired bone healing biology secondary to soft tissue deficits and chemotherapy contribute to non-union, fracture and infection following limb salvage surgery in Osteosarcoma patients. Approved bone healing augments such as recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) have great potential to mitigate these complications. rhBMP-2 use in sarcoma surgery is limited, however, due to concerns of pro-oncogenic signalling within the tumour resection bed. To the contrary, recent pre-clinical studies demonstrate that BMP-2 may induce Osteosarcoma differentiation and limit tumour growth. Further pre-clinical studies evaluating the oncologic influences of BMP-2 in Osteosarcoma are needed. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how BMP-2 signalling affects Osteosarcoma cell proliferation and metastasis in an active tumour bed. Two Osteosarcoma cell lines (143b and SaOS-2) were assessed for proliferative capacity and invasion. 143b and SaOS-2 cells were engineered to upregulate BMP-2. In vitro proliferation was assessed using a cell viability assay, motility was assessed with a scratch wound healing assay, and degree of osteoblastic differentiation was assessed using qRT-PCR of Osteoblastic markers (CTGF, ALP, Runx-2 and Osx). For in vivo evaluation, Osteosarcoma cells were injected into the intramedullary proximal tibia of immunocompromised (NOD-SCID) mice and local tumour growth and metastases were assessed using weekly bioluminescence imaging (BLI) and tumour volume measurements for 4–6 weeks. At the experimental end point we assessed radiographic tumour burden using ex-vivo micro-CT, as well as tibial and pulmonary gross and histologic pathology. SaOS-2 was more differentiated than 143b, with increased expression of Runx-2 (p = 0.009), Osx (p = 0.004) and ALP (p = 0.035). BMP-2 upregulation did not stimulate an osteoblast differentiation response in 143b, but stimulated an increase in Osx expression in SaOS-2 (p = 0.002). BMP-2 upregulation in 143b cells resulted in increased proliferation in vitro (p = 0.014), faster in vitro wound healing (p = 0.03), significantly increased tumour volume (p = 0.001) with enhanced osteolysis detected on micro-CT, but did not affect rates of
To set up an osteosarcoma mouse model with spontaneous
Impaired bone healing biology secondary to soft tissue deficits and chemotherapy contribute to non-union, fracture and infection following limb salvage surgery in Osteosarcoma patients. Approved bone healing augments such as recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) have great potential to mitigate these complications. rhBMP-2 use in sarcoma surgery is limited, however, due to concerns of pro-oncogenic signalling within the tumour resection bed. To the contrary, recent pre-clinical studies demonstrate that BMP-2 may induce Osteosarcoma differentiation and limit tumour growth. Further pre-clinical studies evaluating the oncologic influences of BMP-2 in Osteosarcoma are needed. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how BMP-2 signalling affects Osteosarcoma cell proliferation and metastasis in an active tumour bed. Two Osteosarcoma cell lines (143b and SaOS-2) were assessed for proliferative capacity and invasion. 143b and SaOS-2 cells were engineered to upregulate BMP-2. In vitro proliferation was assessed using a cell viability assay, motility was assessed with a scratch wound healing assay, and degree of osteoblastic differentiation was assessed using qRT-PCR of Osteoblastic markers (CTGF, ALP, Runx-2 and Osx). For in vivo evaluation, Osteosarcoma cells were injected into the intramedullary proximal tibia of immunocompromised (NOD-SCID) mice and local tumour growth and metastases were assessed using weekly bioluminescence imaging and tumour volume measurements for 4–6 weeks. At the experimental end point we assessed radiographic tumour burden using ex-vivo micro-CT, as well as tibial and pulmonary gross and histologic pathology. SaOS-2 was more differentiated than 143b, with significantly increased expression of the Osteoblast markers Osx (p = 0.004) and ALP (p = 0.035). BMP-2 upregulation did not stimulate an osteoblast differentiation response in 143b, but stimulated an increase in Osx expression in SaOS-2 (p = 0.002). BMP-2 upregulation in 143b cells resulted in increased proliferation in vitro (p = 0.014), faster in vitro wound healing (p = 0.03), significantly increased tumour volume (p = 0.001) with enhanced osteolysis detected on micro-CT, but did not affect rates of
Navigation-assisted surgery has been reported to enhance resection accuracy in bone sarcoma surgery. Patient-specific instruments (PSIs) have been proposed as a simpler alternative with fewer setup facilities. We investigated the use of 3D surgical planning and PSI in realising computer planning of complex resections in bone sarcoma patients with regards to surgical accuracy, problems, and early clinical results. We retrospectively studied twelve patients with bone sarcoma treated surgically by PSIs with 3D planning. The procedure was planned using engineering software. The resection accuracy was accessed by comparing CT images of tumour specimens with the planned in seven patients. Mean age was 30.9 (9 – 64). Mean follow-up was 3.1 year (0.5 – 5.3). 31 planes of bone resections were successfully performed using the technique and were considered accurate. The mean time required for placing PSIs was 5.7 minutes (1 – 10) and performing bone osteotomies with the assistance of PSIs was 4.7 minutes (2 – 7). The mean maximum deviation error was 1.7mm (0.5 – 4.4). One PSI was broken during bone resection, and one patient needed re-resection using the same PSI. One pelvic patient died of local recurrence and lung metastases six months postoperatively. One patient developed a soft tissue local recurrence and
Chondrosarcoma responds poorly to adjuvant therapy and therefore, new targeted therapy is required. Animal models have been utilised to test therapeutic candidates, however clinically relevant, orthotopic models are lacking. The aim of this study was to develop such a model. In vitro: two human chondrosarcoma cell lines, JJ012 and FS090, were compared with respect to proliferation, colony formation, invasion, MMP-2 and MMP-9 secretion, osteoclastogenesis, endothelial tube stimulation, and expression of the angiogenic factor VEGF, and the anti-angiogenic factor RECK on western blotting. In vivo: 20,000 cells (JJ012 or FS090) were injected either into the intramedullary canal of the mouse tibia (n=5 for each cell line), or into the tibial periosteum (n=5 for each cell line). Animals were measured, and x-rayed weekly. Once euthanised, tibias and lungs were preserved, embedded and sectioned to determine the presence of tumour and lung metastases. In vitro: compared with FS090, JJ012 demonstrated significantly higher proliferative capacity at both day two and day four (p=0.017, and p=0.01). JJ012 had a significantly greater ability to invade Matrigel with an average number of 812.5 invading cells, versus 140.8 FS090 cells (p=0.0005). JJ012 readily formed colonies in collagen I, while FS090 formed none. JJ012 conditioned medium stimulated endothelial tube formation and osteoclastogenesis with a greater potency than FS090 conditioned medium. In vivo: tumours formed in the intratibial and periosteal groups injected with JJ012, whilst no mice injected with FS090 cells developed discernable tumours on physical inspection, caliper measurement or histological section. Periosteal tumours grew to three times the non-injected limb size by seven weeks, whereas intratibial injected limbs required 10 weeks to achieve the same extent of tumour growth. All JJ012 periosteal tumours resulted in lung micrometastases, while only 2/4 JJ012 intratibial tumours demonstrated metastases. Lung metastases stained positive with Von Kossa and alizarin red stains, indicating a tendency for calcification, which is similar to metastases in the human disease. Sectioned tumour tissue demonstrated features of grade II-III chondrosarcoma. Similarities with the human disease were also noted on the X-ray, including endosteal scalloping, and cortical thickening. Both intratibial and periosteal JJ012 models replicate the site, morphology, and many behavioural characteristics of human chondrosarcoma. Local tumour invasion of bone and spontaneous