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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 313 - 313
1 Jul 2014
Tan J Lim J Chen Y Kumar N
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Summary. Neurological deficits resulting from spinal cord compression occur infrequently. When presented with neurological compromise, the most common management was radiotherapy, with surgery only being offered to patients who developed neurological deficit or pathological fracture resulting in unresolved severe pain post radiotherapy. Introduction. Nasopharyngeal carcinoma has been reported to have a higher incidence of distant metastases to the spine. This study was conducted to evaluate the incidence, presentation and management of neurological involvement related to spinal metastasis from nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Patients and Methods. 814 patients with the diagnosis of NPC who presented to the National University Hospital (NUH), Singapore, over a 5-year period (2007–2011) were recruited for this study. Case records from clinics, wards, operating theatres at NUH and nationwide electronic records of polyclinics and Emergency Medical Department (EMD) were obtained and reviewed. The data collected included demographics, medical history, radiologic and histopathology reports. Results. Of 814 patients with NPC, 99 had spinal metastasis. 26 were treated with radiotherapy, 25 with chemotherapy, 5 with both chemo and radiotherapy and 6 with surgery. Out of 6 patients requiring spinal surgical procedure, 3 had neurological deficits in the form of focal sensory or motor deficits and 4 had symptoms of pathologic fracture. One patient had both neurological deficit and pathological fracture. All these 6 patients were treated with a spinal surgical procedure of stabilization and/or decompression. Discussion/Conclusion. Spinal metastasis is common in patients with NPC and back pain is the usual presentation. Neurological deficits resulting from nerve root or spinal cord compression occur infrequently. When presented with neurological compromise, the most common management was radiotherapy, with surgery only being offered to patients who developed neurological deficit or pathological fracture resulting in unresolved severe pain post radiotherapy


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Dec 2022
Contartese D Salamanna F Borsari V Pagani S Sartori M Martini L Brodano GB Gasbarrini A Fini M
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Breast cancer is the most frequent malignancy in women with an estimation of 2.1 million new diagnoses in 2018. Even though primary tumours are usually efficiently removed by surgery, 20–40% of patients will develop metastases in distant organs. Bone is one of the most frequent site of metastases from advanced breast cancer, accounting from 55 to 58% of all metastases. Currently, none of the therapeutic strategies used to manage breast cancer bone metastasis are really curative. Tailoring a suitable model to study and evaluate the disease pathophysiology and novel advanced therapies is one of the major challenges that will predict more effectively and efficiently the clinical response. Preclinical traditional models have been largely used as they can provide standardization and simplicity, moreover, further advancements have been made with 3D cultures, by spheroids and artificial matrices, patient derived xenografts and microfluidics. Despite these models recapitulate numerous aspects of tumour complexity, they do not completely mimic the clinical native microenvironment. Thus, to fulfil this need, in our study we developed a new, advanced and alternative model of human breast cancer bone metastasis as potential biologic assay for cancer research. The study involved breast cancer bone metastasis samples obtained from three female patients undergoing wide spinal decompression and stabilization through a posterior approach. Samples were cultured in a TubeSpin Bioreactor on a rolling apparatus under hypoxic conditions at time 0 and for up to 40 days and evaluated for viability by the Alamar Blue test, gene expression profile, histology and immunohistochemistry. Results showed the maintenance and preservation, at time 0 and after 40 days of culture, of the tissue viability, biological activity, as well as molecular markers, i.e. several key genes involved in the complex interactions between the tumour cells and bone able to drive cancer progression, cancer aggressiveness and metastasis to bone. A good tis sue morphological and microarchitectural preservation with the presence of lacunar osteolysis, fragmented trabeculae locally surrounded by osteoclast cells and malignant cells and an intense infiltration by tumour cells in bone marrow compartment in all examined samples. Histomorphometrical data on the levels of bone resorption and bone apposition parameters remained constant between T0 and T40 for all analysed patients. Additionally, immunohistochemistry showed homogeneous expression and location of CDH1, CDH2, KRT8, KRT18, Ki67, CASP3, ESR1, CD8 and CD68 between T0 and T40, thus further confirming the invasive behaviour of breast cancer cells and indicating the maintaining of the metastatic microenvironment. The novel tissue culture, set-up in this study, has significant advantages in comparison to the pre-existent 3D models: the tumour environment is the same of the clinical scenario, including all cell types as well as the native extracellular matrix; it can be quickly set-up employing only small samples of breast cancer bone metastasis tissue in a simple, ethically correct and cost-effective manner; it bypasses and/or decreases the necessity to use more complex preclinical model, thus reducing the ethical burden following the guiding principles aimed at replacing/reducing/refining (3R) animal use and their suffering for scientific purposes; it can allow the study of the interactions within the breast cancer bone metastasis tissue over a relatively long period of up to 40 days, preserving the tumour morphology and architecture and allowing also the evaluation of different biological factors, parameters and activities. Therefore, the study provides for the first time the feasibility and rationale for the use of a human-derived advanced alternative model for cancer research and testing of drugs and innovative strategies, taking into account patient individual characteristics and specific tumour subtypes so predicting patient specific responses.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Dec 2022
Lipreri M Vecchione R Corrado B Avnet S Perut F Baldini N Graziani G
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Vertebral metastases are the most common type of malignant lesions of the spine. Although this tumour is still considered incurable and standard treatments are mainly palliative, the standard approach consists in surgical resection, which results in the formation of bone gaps. Hence, scaffolds, cements and/or implants are needed to fill the bone lacunae. Here, we propose a novel approach to address spinal metastases recurrence, based on the use of anti-tumour metallic-based nanostructured coatings. Moreover, for the first time, a gradient microfluidic approach is proposed for the screening of nanostructured coatings having anti-tumoral effect, to determine the optimal concentration of the metallic compound that permits selective toxicity towards tumoral cells. Coatings are based on Zinc as anti-tumour agent, which had been never explored before for treatment of bone metastases. The customized gradient generating microfluidic chip was designed by Autodesk Inventor and fabricated from a microstructured mould by using replica moulding technique. Microstructured mould were obtained by micro-milling technique. The chip is composed of a system of microfluidic channels generating a gradient of 6 concentrations of drug and a compartment with multiple arrays of cell culture chambers, one for each drug concentration. The device is suitable for dynamic cultures and in-chip biological assays. The formation of a gradient was validated using a methylene blue solution and the cell loading was successful. Preliminary biological data on 3D dynamic cultures of stromal cells (bone-marrow mesenchymal stem cells) and breast carcinoma cells (MDA-MB-231) were performed in a commercial microfluidic device. Results showed that Zn eluates had a selective cytotoxic effect for tumoral cells. Indeed, cell migration and cell replication of treated tumoral cells was inhibited. Moreover, the three-dimensionality of the model strongly affected the efficacy of Zn eluates, as 2D preliminary experiments showed a high cytotoxic effect of Zn also for stromal cells, thus confirming that traditional screening tests on 2D cultured cells usually lead to an overestimation of drug efficacy and toxicity. Based on preliminary data, the customized platform could be considered a major advancement in cancer drug screenings as it also allows the rapid and efficient screening of biomaterials having antitumor effect


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 104 - 104
1 Jan 2017
Kan C Chan Y Selvaratnam V Donnachie N
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The femur is a common site for skeletal bony metastases. The aim of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of femoral intramedullary nailing in prophylactic versus therapeutic treatment in femoral metastases. All femoral nails between April 2011 and November 2015 at a district general hospital were assessed. Intramedullary nailing performed for prophylactic or therapeutic management were included. Outcomes include mortality, survival time and length of stay in hospital. A total of 40 cases were included. In the prophylactic group there were 25 patients and in the therapeutic group there were 15 patients. In the prophylactic group, mean age was 70 years (range 41–91); male to female ratio is 23:17 and 26 patients of this group was deceased. In the therapeutic group, mean age was 76 years (range 56–92); male to female ratio 15:10 and 10 patients were deceased in this group. The most common primary was prostate carcinoma followed by breast carcinoma. In the prophylactic group, mean survival was 25 weeks (range 2–147) and in the therapeutic group mean survival was 20 weeks (range 2–39). The length of stay was 21 days (range 3–80) in the prophylactic group and 28 days (range 7–63) in the therapeutic group. Femoral nailing for metastases helps improve quality of life and we observed a mean survival time of 20–25 weeks postoperatively in both therapeutic and prophylactic nailing


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Nov 2018
Baldini N
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The initiation and progression of malignant tumors are supported by their microenvironment: cancer cells per se cannot explain growth and formation of the primary or metastasis, and a combination of proliferating tumor cells, cancer stem cells, immune cells, mesenchymal stromal cells and/or cancer-associated fibroblasts all contribute to the tumor bulk. The interaction between these multiple players, under different microenvironmental conditions of biochemical and physical stimuli (i.e. oxygen tension, pH, matrix mechanics), regulates the production and biological activity of several soluble factors, extracellular matrix components, and extracellular vesicles that are needed for growth, maintenance, chemoresistance and metastatization of cancer. Both in osteosarcoma and bone metastases from carcinomas this aspect has been only recently explored. In this lecture, I will discuss the role of tumor microenvironment, with a particular focus on the mesenchymal stroma, contributing to bone tumor progression through inherent. The most recent advances in the molecular cues triggered by cytokines, soluble factors, and metabolites that are partially beginning to unravel the axis between stromal elements of mesenchymal origin and bone cancer cells, under different microenvironmental conditions, will be reviewed providing insights likely to be used for novel therapeutic approaches


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 5 | Pages 907 - 908
1 Sep 1998
Hutchinson JW Tierney GM Parsons SL Davis TRC

In a series of 12 patients with inoperable gastric carcinoma who had treatment with a synthetic matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor (Marimastat) for more than one month, six developed a frozen shoulder or a condition resembling Dupuytren’s disease. This suggests that the matrix metalloproteinases, a family of naturally occurring proteinases, may be involved in the pathogenesis of these two conditions. Our observation opens avenues for further research which could lead to local or systemic therapeutic interventions for frozen shoulder and Dupuytren’s disease


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 4 | Pages 580 - 585
1 Apr 2010
Shido Y Nishida Y Suzuki Y Kobayashi T Ishiguro N

We undertook a study of the anti-tumour effects of hyperthermia, delivered via magnetite cationic liposomes (MCLs), on local tumours and lung metastases in a mouse model of osteosarcoma. MCLs were injected into subcutaneous osteosarcomas (LM8) and subjected to an alternating magnetic field which induced a heating effect in MCLs. A control group of mice with tumours received MCLs but were not exposed to an AMF. A further group of mice with tumours were exposed to an AMF but had not been treated with MCLs. The distribution of MCLs and local and lung metastases was evaluated histologically. The weight and volume of local tumours and the number of lung metastases were determined. Expression of heat shock protein 70 was evaluated immunohistologically. Hyperthermia using MCLs effectively heated the targeted tumour to 45°C. The mean weight of the local tumour was significantly suppressed in the hyperthermia group (p = 0.013). The mice subjected to hyperthermia had significantly fewer lung metastases than the control mice (p = 0.005). Heat shock protein 70 was expressed in tumours treated with hyperthermia, but was not found in those tumours not exposed to hyperthermia.

The results demonstrate a significant effect of hyperthermia on local tumours and reduces their potential to metastasise to the lung.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1292 - 1297
1 Sep 2005
Lietman SA Inoue N Rafiee B Deitz LW Chao EYS

We used a canine intercalary bone defect model to determine the effects of recombinant human osteogenic protein 1 (rhOP-1) on allograft incorporation. The allograft was treated with an implant made up of rhOP-1 and type I collagen or with type I collagen alone.

Radiographic analysis showed an increased volume of periosteal callus in both test groups compared with the control group at weeks 4, 6, 8 and 10. Mechanical testing after 12 weeks revealed increased maximal torque and stiffness in the rhOP-1 treated groups compared with the control group.

These results indicate a benefit from the use of an rhOP-1 implant in the healing of bone allografts. The effect was independent of the position of the implant. There may be a beneficial clinical application for this treatment.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1528 - 1532
1 Nov 2008
Verdegaal SHM Corver WE Hogendoorn PCW Taminiau AHM

Surgery is considered to be the most effective treatment for cartilaginous tumours. In recent years, a trend has emerged for patients with low-grade tumours to be treated less invasively using curettage followed by various forms of adjuvant therapy. We investigated the potential for phenol to be used as an adjuvant. Using a human chondrosarcoma-derived cartilage-producing cell line OUMS-27 as an in vitro model we studied the cytotoxic effect of phenol and ethanol. Since ethanol is the standard substance used to rinse phenol out of a bone cavity, we included an assessment of ethanol to see whether this was an important secondary factor with respect to cell death. The latter was assessed by flow cytometry.

A cytotoxic effect was found for concentrations of phenol of 1.5% and of ethanol of 42.5%. These results may provide a clinical rationale for the use of both phenol and ethanol as adjuvant therapy after intralesional curettage in low-grade central chondrosarcoma and justify further investigation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1249 - 1255
1 Sep 2008
Nishida H Tsuchiya H Tomita K

We evaluated the possible induction of a systemic immune response to increase anti-tumour activity by the re-implantation of destructive tumour tissue treated by liquid nitrogen in a murine osteosarcoma (LM8) model. The tumours were randomised to treatment by excision alone or by cryotreatment after excision. Tissue from the tumour was frozen in liquid nitrogen, thawed in distilled water and then re-implanted in the same animal. In addition, some mice received an immunological response modifier of OK-432 after treatment. We measured the levels of interferon-gamma and interleukin-12 cytokines and the cytotoxicity activity of splenocytes against murine LM8 osteosarcoma cells. The number of lung and the size of abdominal metastases were also measured.

Re-implantation of tumour tissue after cryotreatment activated immune responses and inhibited metastatic tumour growth. OK-432 synergistically enhanced the anti-tumour effect. Our results suggest that the treatment of malignant bone tumours by reconstruction using autografts containing tumours which have been treated by liquid nitrogen may be of clinical value.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1097 - 1101
1 Aug 2006
Jambhekar NA Kulkarni SP Madur BP Agarwal S Rajan MGR

A retrospective series of 45 cases of chronic osteomyelitis collected over a period of 14 years was histologically classified into tuberculous osteomyelitis (25) and chronic non-granulomatous osteomyelitis (20). The tuberculous osteomyelitis group was divided into three subgroups: a) typical granulomas (13 cases); b) ill-defined granulomas (seven cases), and c) suspected granulomas (five cases). An in-house polymerase chain reaction amplifying the 245 bp nucleotide sequence, and capable of detecting 10 fg of DNA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was used on the DNA extracted from the paraffin blocks. The polymerase chain reaction was positive in 72% of cases (18) of tuberculous osteomyelitis, but when typical cases of tuberculous osteomyelitis with confirmed granulomas were considered (13), this increased to 84.6% (11). The chronic non-granulomatous osteomyelitis group gave positive polymerase chain reaction results in 20% of the cases (4).

Our preliminary study on tuberculous osteomyelitis shows that the polymerase chain reaction can be a very useful diagnostic tool, since a good correlation was seen between typical granulomas and polymerase chain reaction with a sensitivity of 84.6% and a specificity of 80%. In addition, our study shows that tuberculous osteomyelitis can be diagnosed in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues in the absence of typical granulomas.