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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 118 - 118
1 Jan 2013
Das A Coomber R Halsey T Ollivere B Johnston P
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Aims. Bone is a common site of metastatic disease. Skeletal complications include disabling pain and pathological fractures. Palliative surgery for incurable metastatic bone lesions aims to preserve quality of life and function by providing pain relief and stable mobility with fixation or replacement. Current literature has few treatment studies. We present a 5 year longitudinal cohort study of surgery for metastatic bone disease at our large teaching hospital reviewing our complication and mortality rates. Methods. Patients that underwent palliative surgery for metastatic bone lesions were identified from operative records. Demographics, clinical details and outcomes were recorded. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to calculate survivorship. Results. 43 patients were treated for 44 bone metastases (34 IM Nails, 9 prosthetic replacements, 1 plate). The median age at primary diagnosis was 66 (33–92). Lung cancer was the most common primary. 56% presented with complete fractures and 44% with impending fractures (median Mirel score of 10). Pertrochanteric bone lesions were the most common (74%). Two out of 43 patients died within one day of surgery. 30 day mortality was 12% and 45% at 1 year. In those surviving the 30 day perioperative period, we report a complication rate of 14%. One patient had a dislocated prosthesis. Two patients had delayed or non union and two patients had failure of metalwork. No patient required re operation. Conclusion. Our series observed a 5% fixation failure rate and significant perioperative mortality. Whilst surgery may offer benefit in the non moribund patient with pathological fracture the decision to offer prophylactic surgery is more difficult in light of the high perioperative mortality seen in our study. Indeed, the patients in our study who died within 24 hours of surgery had prophylactic fixations. We conclude that surgical intervention must be carefully considered with realistic expectations of outcomes


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
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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. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Dec 2022
Moskven E Lasry O Singh S Flexman A Fisher C Street J Boyd M Ailon T Dvorak M Kwon B Paquette S Dea N Charest-Morin R
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En bloc resection for primary bone tumours and isolated metastasis are complex surgeries associated with a high rate of adverse events (AEs). The primary objective of this study was to explore the relationship between frailty/sarcopenia and major perioperative AEs following en bloc resection for primary bone tumours or isolated metastases of the spine. Secondary objectives were to report the prevalence and distribution of frailty and sarcopenia, and determine the relationship between these factors and length of stay (LOS), unplanned reoperation, and 1-year postoperative mortality in this population. This is a retrospective study of prospectively collected data from a single quaternary care referral center consisting of patients undergoing an elective en bloc resection for a primary bone tumour or an isolated spinal metastasis between January 1st, 2009 and February 28th, 2020. Frailty was calculated with the modified frailty index (mFI) and spine tumour frailty index (STFI). Sarcopenia, determined by the total psoas area (TPA) vertebral body (VB) ratio (TPA/VB), was measured at L3 and L4. Regression analysis produced ORs, IRRs, and HRs that quantified the association between frailty/sarcopenia and major perioperative AEs, LOS, unplanned reoperation and 1-year postoperative mortality. One hundred twelve patients met the inclusion criteria. Using the mFI, five patients (5%) were frail (mFI ³ 0.21), while the STFI identified 21 patients (19%) as frail (STFI ³ 2). The mean CT ratios were 1.45 (SD 0.05) and 1.81 (SD 0.06) at L3 and L4 respectively. Unadjusted analysis demonstrated that sarcopenia and frailty were not significant predictors of major perioperative AEs, LOS or unplanned reoperation. Sarcopenia defined by the CT L3 TPA/VB and CT L4 TPA/VB ratios significantly predicted 1-year mortality (HR of 0.32 per one unit increase, 95% CI 0.11-0.93, p=0.04 vs. HR of 0.28 per one unit increase, 95% CI 0.11-0.69, p=0.01) following unadjusted analysis. Frailty defined by an STFI score ≥ 2 predicted 1-year postoperative mortality (OR of 2.10, 95% CI 1.02-4.30, p=0.04). The mFI was not predictive of any clinical outcome in patients undergoing en bloc resection for primary bone tumours or isolated metastases of the spine. Sarcopenia defined by the CT L3 TPA/VB and L4 TPA/VB and frailty assessed with the STFI predicted 1-year postoperative mortality on univariate analysis but not major perioperative AEs, LOS or reoperation. Further investigation with a larger cohort is needed to identify the optimal measure for assessing frailty and sarcopenia in this spine population


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 19 - 19
1 Dec 2022
Eltit F Wang Q Xu S Satra M Liu D Wang R Charest-Morin R Cox M
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One out of nine Canadian males would suffer prostate cancer (PC) during his lifetime. Life expectancy of males with PC has increased with modern therapy and 90% live >10 years. However, 20% of PC-affected males would develop incurable metastatic diseases. Bone metastases (BM) are present in ~80% of metastatic PC patients, and are the most severe complication of PC, generating severe pain, fractures, spinal cord compression, and death. Interestingly, PC-BMs are mostly osteoblastic. However, the structure of this newly formed bone and how it relates to pain and fracture are unknown. Due to androgen antagonist treatment, different PC phenotypes develop with differential dependency on androgen receptor (AR) signaling: androgen-dependent (AR+), double negative (AR-) and neuroendocrine. How these phenotypes are related to changes in bone structure has not been studied. Here we show a state-of-the-art structural characterization of PCBM and how PC phenotypes are associated to abnormal bone formation in PCBM. Cadaveric samples (n=14) obtained from metastases of PC in thoracic or lumbar vertebrae (mean age 74yo) were used to analyze bone structure. We used micro-computed tomography (mCT) to analyze the three-dimensional structure of the bone samples. After imaging, the samples were sectioned and one 3mm thick section was embedded in epoxy-resin, ground and polished. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)/energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) and quantitative backscattering electron (qBSE) imaging were used to determine mineral morphology and composition. Another section was used for histological analysis of the PC-affected bone. Collagen structure, fibril orientation and extracellular matrix composition were characterized using histochemistry. Additionally, we obtained biopsies of 3 PCBM patients undergoing emergency decompression surgery following vertebral fracture and used them for immunohistological characterization. By using mCT, we observed three dysmorphic bone patterns: osteolytic pattern with thinned trabecula of otherwise well-organized structures, osteoblastic pattern defined as accumulation of disorganized matrix deposited on pre-existing trabecula, and osteoblastic pattern with minimum residual trabecula and bone space dominated by accumulation of disorganized mineralized matrix. Comparing mCT data with patho/clinical parameters revealed a trend for higher bone density in males with larger PSA increase. Through histological sections, we observed that PC-affected bone, lacks collagen alignment structure, have a higher number of lacunae and increased amount of proteoglycans as decorin. Immunohistochemistry of biopsies revealed that PC-cells inside bone organize into two manners: i) glandular-like structures where cells maintain their polarization in the expression of prostate markers, ii) diffuse infiltrate that spreads along bone surfaces, with loss of cell polarity. These cells take direct contact with osteoblasts in the surface of trabecula. We define that PCBM are mostly composed by AR+ with some double negative cells. We did not observe neuroendocrine phenotype cells. PCBMs generate predominantly osteoblastic lesions that are characterized by high lacunar density, lack of collagen organization and elevated proteoglycan content. These structural changes are associated with the infiltration of PC cells that are mostly androgen-dependent but have lost their polarization and contact directly with osteoblasts, perhaps altering their function. These changes could be associated with lower mechanical properties that led to fracture and weakness of the PCBM affected bone


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 146 - 146
1 Jul 2020
Al-Shakfa F Wang Z Truong V
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Spinal metastases are seen in 10–30% of cancer patients. Twenty percent of these metastases occur in the lumbo-sacral spine. Lumbo-sacral spine has different mechanical properties and encloses the cauda equina. Few studies took interest in this spinal segment. The objective of this study is to evaluate prognostic factors of lumbo-sacral spinal metastasis treated in our center. We retrospectively reviewed 376 patients who were operated in our center from 2010 to 2018. Eighty-nine patients presented lumbo-sacral metastases and thus were included. Data collected included age, smoking, tumor histology, American spinal injury association (ASIA) score, modified Tokuhashi score, modified Bauer score, ambulation status and adjuvant treatment. The mean population age was 60.9 years old (35–85). The tumor histology was predominantly lung (19 patients, 21.3%), breast (13 patients, 14.6%), kidney (11 patients, 12.4%) and prostate (9 patients 10.1%). Twenty-two patients (24.7%) were unable to walk preoperatively. Seventy-nine patients (88.8%) underwent a posterior open approach with corpectomy in 65 patients (73%). Eighteen patients regained ambulation post-operatively (81.8%). The mean survival was 24.03 months (CI95% 17,38–30,67, Range 0–90) and the median of survival was 9 months (CI95% 4.38–13.62). Better preoperative ASIA score had a significant favorable effect (p=0.03) on survival. Patients who regained their ability to walk had better survival (25.1 months (CI95% 18.2–32) VS 0.5 months (CI95% 0–1.1). Postoperative radiotherapy had a benefic effect on survival (p=0.019): Survival Increased from 10.5 months (CI95% 2.4–18.7) to 27.6 months (CI95% 19.5–35.8). The modified Tokuhashi and the modified Bauer scores underestimated the survival of the patients with lumbosacral metastases. Lumbosacral spinal metastases has better survival than expected by Tokuhashi and Bauer score. Surgical procedure have an important impact on survival and the ability to walk


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 63 - 63
1 Mar 2021
Bozzo A Deng J Bhasin R Deodat M Abbas U Wariach S Axelrod D Masrouha K Wilson D Ghert M
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Lung cancer is the most common cancer diagnosed, the leading cause of cancer-related deaths, and bone metastases occurs in 20–40% of lung cancer patients. They often present symptomatically with pain or skeletal related events (SREs), which are independently associated with decreased survival. Bone modifying agents (BMAs) such as Denosumab or bisphosphonates are routinely used, however no specific guidelines exist from the National Comprehensive Cancer Center or the European Society of Medical Oncologists. Perhaps preventing the formation of guidelines is the lack of a high-quality quantitative synthesis of randomized controlled trial (RCT) data to determine the optimal treatment for the patient important outcomes of 1) Overall survival (OS), 2) Time to SRE, 3) SRE incidence, and 4) Pain Resolution. The objective of this study was to perform the first systematic review and network meta-analysis (NMA) to assess the best BMA for treatment of metastatic lung cancer to bone. We conducted our study in accordance to the PRISMA protocol. We performed a librarian assisted search of MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library and Chinese databases including CNKI and Wanfang Data. We included studies that are RCTs reporting outcomes specifically for lung cancer patients treated with a bisphosphonate or Denosumab. Screening, data extraction, risk of bias and GRADE were performed in duplicate. The NMA was performed using a Bayesian probability model with R. Results are reported as relative risks, odds ratios or mean differences, and the I2 value is reported for heterogeneity. We assessed all included articles for risk of bias and applied the novel GRADE framework for NMAs to rate the quality of evidence supporting each outcome. We included 132 RCTs comprising 11,161 patients with skeletal metastases from lung cancer. For OS, denosumab was ranked above zoledronic acid (ZA) and estimated to confer an average of 3.7 months (95%CI: −0.5 – 7.6) increased survival compared to untreated patients. For time to SRE, denosumab was ranked first with an average of 9.1 additional SRE-free months (95%CI: 4.0 – 14.0) compared to untreated patients, while ZA conferred an additional 4.8 SRE-free months (2.4 – 7.0). Patients treated with the combination of Ibandronate and systemic therapy were 2.3 times (95%CI: 1.7 – 3.2) more likely to obtain successful pain resolution, compared to untreated. Meta-regression showed no effect of heterogeneity length of follow-up or pain scales on the observed treatment effects. Heterogeneity in the network was considered moderate for overall survival and time to SRE, mild for SRE incidence, and low for pain resolution. While a generally high risk of bias was observed across studies, whether they were from Western or Chinese databases. The overall GRADE for the evidence underlying our results is High for Pain control and SRE incidence, and Moderate for OS and time to SRE. This study represents the most comprehensive synthesis of the best available evidence guiding pharmacological treatment of bone metastases from lung cancer. Denosumab is ranked above ZA for both overall survival and time to SRE, but both treatments are superior to no treatment. ZA was first among all bisphosphonates assessed for odds of reducing SRE incidence, while the combination of Ibandronate and radionuclide therapy was most effective at significantly reducing pain from metastases. Clinicians and policy makers may use this synthesis of all available RCT data as support for the use of a BMA in MBD for lung cancer


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 68 - 68
1 Mar 2021
AlFayyadh F Farii HA Farahdel L Turcotte R Frazer A
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The aim was to analyze the efficacy of zoledronic acid (ZA) versus denosumab in the prevention of pathological fractures in patients with bone metastases from advanced cancers by evaluating all available randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on this subject. A systematic search of electronic databases (PubMed and MEDLINE) was performed to identify all published RCTs comparing zoledronic acid with denosumab in prevention of pathological fractures in bone metastases. Risk of bias of the studies was assessed. The primary outcomes evaluated were pathological fractures. Four RCTs (7320 patients) were included. Denosumab was superior to ZA in reducing the likelihood of pathological fractures, when all tumour types were combined (OR 0.86, 95% CI [0.74, 0.99], p = 0.04). Denosumab was not significantly favoured over ZA in endodermal origin (breast and prostate) (OR 0.85, 95% CI [0.68, 1.05], p = 0.13) and mesodermal origin tumours (solid tumours and MM) (OR 0.87, 95% CI [0.71, 1.06], p = 0.16). Denosumab significantly reduces the likelihood of pathological fractures in comparison to ZA in patients with bone metastases. When pathological fractures were grouped by tumour origin (endodermal or mesodermal), there was no significant difference between denosumab and ZA. Further long-term studies are needed to confirm the effectiveness of these treatment regimens


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 114 - 114
10 Feb 2023
Rosser K Ryu J Deo S Flint M
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The NZ Standards of Service Provision for Sarcoma patients were developed by the NZ Sarcoma working group and published by the Ministry of Health (MOH) in 2013. Although not formally enacted by the MOH we aimed to determine the impact of these published standards and referral pathways on disease-specific survival of patients with soft-tissue sarcoma in NZ. The Middlemore Musculoskeletal Tumour Unit database was searched. Patients referred for treatment in our centre with a diagnosis of soft tissue sarcoma in the five-year period before (n=115) and after (n=155) were included. We excluded patients with bone sarcomas and retroperitoneal soft tissue sarcomas. The rate of referral after inappropriate treatment reduced after implementation of the Standards (24% vs 12%, p=0.010). The number of patients referred with tumours larger than 50mm decreased (74.8% vs 72.3%, p=0.021) and fewer had metastases at diagnosis (11.3% vs 3.2%, p=0.017). Mortality was lower in the group after introduction of the Standards (45% vs 30%, p=0.017). The estimated disease-specific survival curve between the two groups shows a trend towards increased survival in the post-standards group, although not reaching statistical significance. Local recurrence rate and metastasis rate after definitive treatment were similar between the two groups. Patients had a shorter duration of symptoms before referral in the post-Standards group although this was not statistically significant. Since implementation of the Standards, patients have been referred more promptly, with fewer inappropriate treatments. The time to mortality curve indicates a trend towards improved disease-specific survival. We conclude that the pathway for investigation and referral for this condition has become clearer, supporting the ongoing use of the Sarcoma Standards, and that these should be formally implemented by the MOH


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Dec 2022
Tolgyesi A Huang C Akens M Hardisty M Whyne C
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Bone turnover and the accumulation of microdamage are impacted by the presence of skeletal metastases which can contribute to increased fracture risk. Treatments for metastatic disease may further impact bone quality. The present study aims to establish a preliminary understanding of microdamage accumulation and load to failure in osteolytic vertebrae following stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), zoledronic acid (ZA), or docetaxel (DTX) treatment. Twenty-two six-week old athymic female rats (Hsd:RH-Foxn1rnu, Envigo, USA) were inoculated with HeLa cervical cancer cells through intracardiac injection (day 0). Institutional approval was obtained for this work and the ARRIVE guidelines were followed. Animals were randomly assigned to four groups: untreated (n=6), spine stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) administered on day 14 (n=6), zoledronic acid (ZA) administered on day 7 (n=5), and docetaxel (DTX) administered on day 14 (n=5). Animals were euthanized on day 21. T13-L3 vertebral segments were collected immediately after sacrifice and stored in −20°C wrapped in saline soaked gauze until testing. µCT scans (µCT100, Scanco, Switzerland) of the T13-L3 segment confirmed tumour burden in all T13 and L2 vertebrae prior to testing. T13 was stained with BaSO. 4. to label microdamage. High resolution µCT scans were obtained (90kVp, 44uA, 4W, 4.9µm voxel size) to visualize stain location and volume. Segmentations of bone and BaSO. 4. were created using intensity thresholding at 3000HU (~736mgHA/cm. 3. ) and 10000HU (~2420mgHA/cm. 3. ), respectively. Non-specific BaSO. 4. was removed from the outer edge of the cortical shell by shrinking the segmentation by 105mm in 3D. Stain volume fraction was calculated as the ratio of BaSO. 4. volume to the sum of BaSO. 4. and bone volume. The L1-L3 motion segments were loaded under axial compression to failure using a µCT compatible loading device (Scanco) and force-displacement data was recorded. µCT scans were acquired unloaded, at 1500µm displacement and post-failure. Stereological analysis was performed on the L2 vertebrae in the unloaded µCT scans. Differences in mean stain volume fraction, mean load to failure, and mean bone volume/total volume (BV/TV) were compared between treatment groups using one-way ANOVAs. Pearson's correlation between stain volume fraction and load to failure by treatment was calculated using an adjusted load to failure divided by BV/TV. Stained damage fraction was significantly different between treatment groups (p=0.0029). Tukey post-hoc analysis showed untreated samples to have higher stain volume fraction (16.25±2.54%) than all treatment groups (p<0.05). The ZA group had the highest mean load to failure (195.60±84.49N), followed by untreated (142.33±53.08N), DTX (126.60±48.75N), and SBRT (95.50±44.96N), but differences did not reach significance (p=0.075). BV/TV was significantly higher in the ZA group (49.28±3.56%) compared to all others. The SBRT group had significantly lower BV/TV than the untreated group (p=0.018). Load divided by BV/TV was not significantly different between groups (p=0.24), but relative load to failure results were consistent (ZA>Untreated>DTX>SBRT). No correlations were found between stain volume fraction and load to failure. Focal and systemic cancer treatments effect microdamage accumulation and load to failure in osteolytic vertebrae. Current testing of healthy controls will help to further separate the effects of the tumour and cancer treatments on bone quality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 15 - 15
1 Dec 2022
Tolgyesi A Huang C Akens M Hardisty M Whyne C
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Bone turnover and the accumulation of microdamage are impacted by the presence of skeletal metastases which can contribute to increased fracture risk. Treatments for metastatic disease may further impact bone quality. The present study aims to establish a preliminary understanding of microdamage accumulation and load to failure in osteolytic vertebrae following stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), zoledronic acid (ZA), or docetaxel (DTX) treatment. Twenty-two six-week old athymic female rats (Hsd:RH-Foxn1rnu, Envigo, USA) were inoculated with HeLa cervical cancer cells through intracardiac injection (day 0). Institutional approval was obtained for this work and the ARRIVE guidelines were followed. Animals were randomly assigned to four groups: untreated (n=6), spine stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) administered on day 14 (n=6), zoledronic acid (ZA) administered on day 7 (n=5), and docetaxel (DTX) administered on day 14 (n=5). Animals were euthanized on day 21. T13-L3 vertebral segments were collected immediately after sacrifice and stored in −20°C wrapped in saline soaked gauze until testing. µCT scans (µCT100, Scanco, Switzerland) of the T13-L3 segment confirmed tumour burden in all T13 and L2 vertebrae prior to testing. T13 was stained with BaSO. 4. to label microdamage. High resolution µCT scans were obtained (90kVp, 44uA, 4W, 4.9µm voxel size) to visualize stain location and volume. Segmentations of bone and BaSO. 4. were created using intensity thresholding at 3000HU (~736mgHA/cm. 3. ) and 10000HU (~2420mgHA/cm. 3. ), respectively. Non-specific BaSO. 4. was removed from the outer edge of the cortical shell by shrinking the segmentation by 105mm in 3D. Stain volume fraction was calculated as the ratio of BaSO. 4. volume to the sum of BaSO. 4. and bone volume. The L1-L3 motion segments were loaded under axial compression to failure using a µCT compatible loading device (Scanco) and force-displacement data was recorded. µCT scans were acquired unloaded, at 1500µm displacement and post-failure. Stereological analysis was performed on the L2 vertebrae in the unloaded µCT scans. Differences in mean stain volume fraction, mean load to failure, and mean bone volume/total volume (BV/TV) were compared between treatment groups using one-way ANOVAs. Pearson's correlation between stain volume fraction and load to failure by treatment was calculated using an adjusted load to failure divided by BV/TV. Stained damage fraction was significantly different between treatment groups (p=0.0029). Tukey post-hoc analysis showed untreated samples to have higher stain volume fraction (16.25±2.54%) than all treatment groups (p<0.05). The ZA group had the highest mean load to failure (195.60±84.49N), followed by untreated (142.33±53.08N), DTX (126.60±48.75N), and SBRT (95.50±44.96N), but differences did not reach significance (p=0.075). BV/TV was significantly higher in the ZA group (49.28±3.56%) compared to all others. The SBRT group had significantly lower BV/TV than the untreated group (p=0.018). Load divided by BV/TV was not significantly different between groups (p=0.24), but relative load to failure results were consistent (ZA>Untreated>DTX>SBRT). No correlations were found between stain volume fraction and load to failure. Focal and systemic cancer treatments effect microdamage accumulation and load to failure in osteolytic vertebrae. Current testing of healthy controls will help to further separate the effects of the tumour and cancer treatments on bone quality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Jul 2020
Clement A Whyne C Hardisty M Wilkie P Akens M
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Quantitative assessment of metastatic involvement of the bony spine is important for assessing disease progression and treatment response. Quantification of metastatic involvement is challenging as tumours may appear as osteolytic (bone resorbing), osteoblastic (bone forming) or mixed. This investigation aimed to develop an automated method to accurately segment osteoblastic lesions in a animal model of metastatically involved vertebrae, imaged with micro computed tomography (μCT). Radiomics seeks to apply standardized features extracted from medical images for the purpose of decision-support as well as diagnosis and treatment planning. Here we investigate the application of radiomic-based features for the delineation of osteoblastic vertebral metastases. Osteoblastic lesions affect bone deposition and bone quality, resulting in a change in the texture of bony material physically seen through μCT imaging. We hypothesize that radiomics based features will be sensitive to changes in osteoblastic lesion bone texture and that these changes will be useful for automating segmentation. Osteoblastic metastases were generated via intracardiac injection of human ZR-75-1 breast cancer cells into a preclinical athymic rat model (n=3). Four months post inoculation, ex-vivo μCT images (µCT100, Scanco) were acquired of each rodent spine focused on the metastatically involved third lumbar vertebra (L3) at 7µm/voxel and resampled to 34µm/voxel. The trabecular bone within each vertebra was isolated using an atlas and level-set based segmentation approach previously developed by our group. Pyradiomics, an open source Radiomics library written in python, was used to calculate 3D image features at each voxel location within the vertebral bone. Thresholding of each radiomic feature map was used to isolate the osteoblastic lesions. The utility of radiomic feature-based segmentation of osteoblastic bone tissue was evaluated on randomly selected 2D sagittal and axial slices of the μCT volume. Feature segmentations were compared to ground truth osteoblastic lesion segmentations by calculating the Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC). Manually defined ground truth osteoblastic tumor segmentations on the μCT slices were informed by histological confirmation of the lesions. The radiomic based features that best segmented osteoblastic tissue while optimizing computational time were derived from the Neighbouring Gray Tone Difference Matrix (NGTDM). Measures of coarseness yielded the best agreement with the manual segmentations (DSC=707%) followed by contrast, strength and complexity (DSC=6513%, 5428%, and 4826%, respectively). This pilot study using a radiomic based approach demonstrates the utility of the NGTDM features for segmentation of vertebral osteoblastic lesions. This investigation looked at the utility of isolated features to segment osteoblastic lesions and found modest performance in isolation. In future work we will explore combining these features using machine learning based classifiers (i.e. decision forests, support vector machines, etc.) to improve segmentation performance


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 101 - 101
1 Jul 2020
Akoury E Ahangar P Luna ASR Nour A Weber M Rosenzweig D
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The spine is one of the most common sites of bony metastasis, with 80% of prostate, lung, and breast cancers metastasizing to the vertebrae resulting in significant morbidity. Current treatment modalities are systemic chemotherapy, such as Doxorubicin (Dox), administered after resection to prevent cancer recurrence, and systemic antiresorptive medication, such as Zolendronate (Zol), to prevent tumor-induced bone destruction. The large systemic doses required to elicit an adequate effect in the spine often leads to significant side-effects by both drugs, limiting their prolonged use and effectiveness. Recently published work by our lab has shown that biocompatible 3D-printed porous polymer scaffolds are an effective way of delivering Dox locally over a sustained period while inhibiting tumor growth in vitro. Our lab has also generated promising results regarding antitumor properties of Zol in vitro. We aim to develop 3D-printed scaffolds to deliver a combination of Zol and Dox that can potentially allow for a synergistic antitumor activity while preventing concurrent bone loss locally at the site of a tumor, avoiding long systemic exposure to these drugs and decreasing side effects in the clinical setting. The PORO Lay polymer filaments are 3D-printed into 5mm diameter disks, washed with deionized water and loaded with Dox or Zol in aqueous buffer over 7 days. Dox or Zol-containing supernatant was collected daily and the drug release was analyzed over time in a fluorescence plate reader. The polymer-drug (Dox or Zol) release was tested in vitro on prostate and lung cancer cell lines and on prostate- or lung-induced bone metastases cells. Alternatively, direct drug treatment was also carried out on the same cells in vitro. Following treatment, all cells were subject to proliferation assay (MTT and alamar blue), viability assay (LIVE/DEAD), migration assay (Boyden chamber) and invasion assay (3D gel matrix). 3D-printed scaffolds loaded with both Dox and Zol will also be tested on cells. We have established an effective dose (EC50) for prostate and lung cancer cell lines and bone metastases cells with direct treatment with Zol or Dox. We have titrated the drug loading of scaffolds to allow for a release amount of Dox at the EC50 dose over 7 days. In ongoing experiments, we are testing the release of Zol. We have shown Dox releasing scaffolds inhibit cancer cell growth in a 2D culture over 7 days using the above cellular assays and testing the scaffolds with Zol is currently being analyzed. 3D-printed porous polymers like the PORO Lay series of products offer a novel and versatile opportunity for delivery of drugs in future clinical settings. They can decrease systemic exposure of drugs while at the same time concentrating the drugs effect at the site of tumors and consequently inhibit tumor proliferation. Their ability to be loaded with multiple drugs can allow for achieving multiple goals while taking advantage of synergistic effects of different drugs. The ability to 3D-print these polymers can allow for production of custom implants that offer better structural support for bone growth


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 41 - 41
1 Jul 2020
Monument M Singla A Affan A Jirik F Hildebrand K Kendal J
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Soft tissue sarcomas (STS) have not demonstrated favourable clinical responses to emerging immunotherapies such as checkpoint inhibitors. Studies in carcinomas and melanoma have demonstrated that tumours lacking T-cell infiltrates are associated with poor responses to immunotherapies. It is postulated that STS lack tumour asscoiated lymphocytes which renders these tumours insensitive to checkpoint inhibitors. Our objective was to develop a novel syngeneic mouse model of STS and characterize the immune phenotype of these tumours. Additionally, we sought to evaluate the therapeutic responses of these sarcomas to checkpoint inhibitors and a Type I interferon agonist. K-ras mutagenesis and p53 deletion was induced using a Lenti-Cre-recombinase injection into the hindlimb of 3 week old C57BL/6 mice. Tumours were harvested and characterized using standard histopathology techniques and whole trascriptome sequencing (RNAseq). Full body necrospy and histopathology was performed to identify metastases. Flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry was used to evaluate tumour immune phenotypes. Tumours were implanted into syngeneic C57BL/6 mice and the therapeutic responses to anti-CTLA4, anti-PD1 and DMXAA (Type I interferon agonist) were performed. Tumour responses were evaluated using bioluminescent imaging and caliper measurements. Soft tissue sarcomas developed in mice within 2–3 months of Lenti-Cre injection with 90% penetrance. Histologic analyses of tumours was consistent with a high-grade myogenic sarcoma characterized by smooth muscle actin, Desmin and Myogenin D positive immunostaining. Using crossplatform normalization protocols, geneexpression signatures of the mouse tumours most closely correlated with human undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (UPS). Collectively, gene expression signatures of this murine sarcoma correlated with all muscle-derived human sarcomas (ERMS, ARMS, Synovial sarcoma, UPS). No lung or other visceral metastases were observed in all mice who developed spontaneous tumours. Immune phenotyping demonstrated a paucity of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs, (TAMs). 50% of identified TILs in these murine sarcomas expressed PD-1, yet tumours were not responsive to anti-PD1 therapy or anti-CTLA4 therapy. A single intra tumoural (i.t.) injection of the Type I interferon agonist, DMXAA resulted in 80–90% tumour necrosis 72 hrs post-injection, decreased tumour viability up to 2 weeks post-injection and a marked infiltration of CD8+ T-cells and anitgen presenting dendritic cells and macrophages. Additional longitudinal experiments demonstrate a sustained and progressive anti-tumour effect in 83% (5/6) mice up to 6weeks following a single i.t. injection of DMXAA. All control treated mice (6/6) reached humane endpoint within 14 days. At 3 months post-DMXAA treatment, 4/6 mice were free of disease. We re-injected UPS tumours into these mice and tumours did not grow, suggesting abscopal effects after DMXAA treatment of primary tumours. We have characterized a new orthotopic and syngeneic mouse model of a myogenic soft tissue sarcoma. Like most human STS sub-types, these tumours have an immune inert tumour microenvironment and are not sensitive to checkpoint inhibitors. This model, syngeneic to C56BL/6 mice will enable future opportunities to investigate how various branches of the immune system can be targetted or manipulated to unearth new immunotherapeutic strategies for sarcoma. Using this model we have demonstrated that a single, intra-tumoural injection of a Type I interferon agonist can result in anti-tumour effects, recruit cytotoxic lymphocytes and antigen presenting cells with into the the tumour microenvironment. Abscopal tumour rejection after DMXAA treatement suggest adaptive T-cell responses against UPS are active in this model. Future work is needed to determine if upregulation of Type I inferferon pathways can be used as a therapeutic strategy for sarcoma or as a sensitization strategy for checkpoint inhibitors


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
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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


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Nov 2016
Ma Y Dalmia S Gao P Young J Liu C You L
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Bone metastases are common and severe complications of cancers. It is estimated to occur in 65–75% of breast and prostate cancer patients and cause 80% of breast cancer-related deaths. Metastasised cancer cells have devastating impacts on bone due to their ability to alter bone remodeling by interacting with osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Exercise, often used as an intervention for cancer patients, regulates bone remodeling via osteocytes. Therefore, we hypothesise that bone mechanical loading may regulate bone metastases via osteocytes. This provides novel insights into the impact of exercises on bone metastases. It will assist in designing cancer intervention programs that lowers the risk for bone metastases. Investigating the mechanisms for the observed effects may also identify potential drug targets. MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells (gift of Dr. Bonewald, University of Missouri-Kansas City) on glass slides were placed in flow chambers and subjected to oscillatory fluid flow (1Pa; 1Hz; 2 hours). Media were extracted (conditioned media; CM) post-flow. RAW264.7 osteoclast precursors were conditioned in MLO-Y4 CM for 7 days. Migration of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells and PC3 prostate cancer cells towards CM was assayed using Transwell. Viability, apoptosis, and proliferation of the cancer cells in the CM were measured with Fixable Viability Dye eFluor 450, APOPercentage, and BrDu, respectively. P-values were calculated using Student's t-test. Significantly more MDA-MB-231 and PC3 cells migrated towards the CM from MLO-Y4 cells with exposure to flow in comparison to CM from MLO-Y4 cells not exposed to flow. The preferential migration is abolished with anti-VEGF antibodies. MDA-MB-231 cells apoptosis rate was slightly lower in CM from MLO-Y4 cells exposed to flow, while proliferation rate was slightly higher. The current data showed no difference in cancer cells viability and adhesion to collagen between any two groups. On the other hand, it was observed that less MDA-MB-231 cells migrated towards CM from RAW264.7 cells conditioned in CM from MLO-Y4 cells stimulated with flow in comparison to those conditioned in CM from MLO-Y4 cells not stimulated with flow. TRAP staining results confirmed that there were less differentiated osteoclasts when RAW264.7 cells were cultured in CM from MLO-Y4 cells exposed to flow. Overall, this study suggests that when only osteocytes and cancer cells are involved, osteocytes subjected to mechanical loading can promote metastases due to the increased secretion of VEGF. However, with the incorporation of osteoclasts, mechanical loading on osteocytes seems to reduce MDA-MB-231 cell migration. This is likely because osteocytes reduce osteoclastogenesis in response to mechanical stimulation, and osteoclasts have been shown to support cancer cells. Animal studies will also be conducted to verify the pro- or anti-metastatic effect of mechanical loading that is observed in the in vitro part of this study


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Dec 2014
Thiart M Davis J
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Introduction:. 25% of patients with an unknown primary tumour present to the orthopaedic surgeon with skeletal metastases. The onus is on the orthopaedic surgeon to establish the diagnosis, not only to decrease the patient's anxiety but also because the median survival increases from 6–9 months to 23 months when the primary is identified and allows for specific cancer treatment. The diagnostic work up of an unknown primary includes a multitude of special investigations. Since PET/CT has high sensitivity and specificity for detecting the primary tumours, we asked the question: Can you diagnose the unknown primary in patients with skeletal metastases with a PET/CT?. Method:. We included all PET/CT scans done in our institution between 2010 and 2013 for patients with malignancies known to metastasize to bone (melanoma, breast, lung, head and neck, GIT, other) and all scans done in patients with unknown primaries. After reviewing 686 PET/CT scans, 492 showed metastatic disease, with 78 of these having either spinal or skeletal metastases. Results:. Of these 78 patients, 68 primaries could be detected on the PET/CT scan. Thus the PET/CT detected the primary in 87% of cases. This number could possibly be higher as some were melanoma and breast cancer patients who had already undergone surgical resection. The most common primary detected was lung, followed by a group of other and unknown primaries which included cervical, kidney and thyroid carcinoma. Conclusion:. PET/CT scan is a good modality to use when looking for a primary malignancy in patients who present to the orthopaedic surgeon with bone metastases. We postulate that this might be a possible first line investigation when looking for the primary


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Oct 2015
Gakhar H Bommireddy R Calthorpe D Klezl Z Williams J
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Background. Loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia) and function in ageing are associated with reduced functional ability, quality of life and reduced life expectancy. In cancer patients, age related muscle loss may be exacerbated by cachexia and poor nutritional intake. Individuals with widespread disseminated disease are most prone to increasing functional decline, increased morbidity and accelerated death. However subjective assessments of physical performance have been shown to be poor indicators of life expectancy in these patients. Aims. To develop an objective measure to aid calculation of life expectancy in cancer by investigating the association between objectively measured lean muscle mass and longevity, in 41 patients with known spinal metastases from all cause primaries. Methods. Lean muscle mass was calculated as total psoas area (TPA)/height (m)2. Two blinded doctors independently calculated TPA from CT images at the L3 level, performed routinely within 7 days of diagnosis of spinal metastases. Time to death was recorded from retrospective analysis of hospital notes. Results. Of patients within the highest tertile for muscle mass 85% were alive at one year, compared with 50% in the lowest tertile. Conclusion. Death within one year in individuals with spinal metastases is significantly higher in patients with low lean muscle mass at presentation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Nov 2016
Nooh A Zhang Y Sato D Dong Z Siegel P Barralet J Weber M
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Bone metastases are the most common cause of cancer-related pain and often lead to other complications such as pathological fractures and spinal cord compression. Bisphosphonates (BP) are a class of potent anti-resorptive agents commonly prescribed to retard osteoporosis progression. Interestingly, BP may have indirect anti-tumour properties through negative effects on macrophages, osteoclasts, endothelial cells and their ability to suppress matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity. Currently, the use of bisphosphonates for cancer therapy is generally restricted to high dose systemic delivery. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of direct local delivery of Zoledronate at the metastatic site in a mouse model of breast cancer metastasis to bone. Seven days following intra-tibial inoculation with MDA-MB-231 (N = 1× 105) breast cancer cells in athymic mice, the experimental group (N = 11) was treated by direct infusion of 2µg of Zoledronate into the tibial lesion (three times/week for three weeks) and compared to vehicle-treated mice (N = 5). The formation of bone metastases and growth of the lesions were followed up by weekly bioluminescence imaging. In a subsequent experiment, a comparison of the effects of local versus systemic delivery of Zoledronate on the formation of osteolytic bone metastases was carried in athymic mice (N = 15). Seven days following intra-tibial inoculation with MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells, the systemic group (N = 5) was treated with Zoledronate (0.025mg/kg) once per week for four weeks and compared to systemic delivery of vehicle (N = 4). Following treatment, the mice were sacrificed, and micro-CT images of the right tibia were obtained. Bone volume to tissue volume ratio (BV/TV%) was determined using µ-CT biomarkers. The first experiment showed a statistically significant increase in mean bone volume/tissue volume ratio% (BV/TV%) in the treated group (7.0±1.54%) as compared to the control group (3.8±0.48%) (P <0.001, 95%CI=1.9–4.3). This corresponded to a net increase of 84.21% in response to Zoledronate treatment. Comparison between the local and systemic effects of Zoledronate also revealed a significant increase in the BV/TV% in the locally treated group (6.69±0.62%) when compared to the cohort administered systemic bisphosphonate treatment (4.03±0.44%) (P<0.001, 95%CI=1.24–3.20), corresponding to a net increase of 66.0%. These preliminary results suggest that high dose sustained release of Zoledronate can lead to a significant inhibition of tumor-induced osteolysis. Moreover, comparison between local and systemic delivery revealed that the effect of local bisphosphonate administration exceeds the benefits of systemic delivery in terms of osteolysis inhibition. Lastly, the noted effects of Zoledronate local delivery triggers the need for further assessment of its anti-tumour activity


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
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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


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 39 - 39
1 Sep 2012
Hojjat S Wise-Milestone L Whyne CM
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Purpose. To develop a low complexity highly-automated multimodal approach to segment vertebral structure and quantify mixed osteolytic/osteoblastic metastases in the rat spine using a combination of CT and MR imaging. We hypothesize that semi-automated multimodal analysis applied to 3D CT and MRI reconstructions will yield accurate and repeatable quantification of whole vertebrae affected by mixed metastases. Method. Mixed spinal metastases were developed via intra-cardiac injection of canine Ace-1 luciferase transfected prostate cancer cells in a 3 week old rnu/rnu rat. Two sequential MR images of the L1-L3 vertebral motion segments were acquired using a 1H quadrature customized birdcage coil at 60 m isotropic voxel size followed by CT imaging at a 14m isotropic voxel size. The first MR image was T1 weighted to highlight the trabecular structure to ensure accurate registration with the CT image. The second MR image was T2 weighted to optimize differentiation between bone marrow and osteolytic tumour tissue. Samples were then processed for undecalcified histology and stained with Goldners Trichrome to identify mineralized bone and unmineralized new bone formation. All images were resampled to 34.9 m and manually aligned to a global axis. This was followed by an affine registration using a Quasi Newton optimizer and a Normalized Mutual Information metric to ensure accurate registration. The whole individual vertebrae and their trabecular centrums were then segmented from the CT images using an extended version of a previously developed atlas based registration algorithm. An intensity-based thresholding method was used to segment the regions corresponding to osteoblastic tumor predominantly attached to the outside of the cortical shell. The whole vertebral segmentation from the CT was warped around the T2 weighted MR to define the bone boundaries. An intensity-based thresholding approach was then applied to the T2 weighted MR segment the osteolytic tumor. Results. The customized MR coil acquired good quality images of both the bone and soft tissue structures in the spine. The CT based automated segmentation of the whole vertebrae and the trabecular centrums yielded high volumetric concurrency (∼90%) when compared to manually refined segmentations. Automated thresholding was even more robust in segmenting the individual trabecular networks and osteolytic tumours. The automation of the osteoblastic tumor segmentation was more challenging yielding concurrencies of ∼80% when compared to manually refined segmentations. Conclusion. We successfully combined CT and μMR imaging to accurately segment mixed metastatic lesions within rat vertebrae using a highly-automated algorithm. These segmentations could readily be used for quantitative evaluation of new and existing treatments aimed at skeletal metastases or to generate finite element models to evaluate biomechanical behaviour or fracture risk