We performed a systematic literature review to define features of patients, treatment, and biological behaviour of multicentric giant cell tumour (GCT) of bone. The search terms used in combination were “multicentric”, “giant cell tumour”, and “bone”. Exclusion criteria were: reports lacking data, with only an abstract; papers not reporting data on multicentric GCT; and papers on multicentric GCT associated with other diseases. Additionally, we report three patients treated under our care.Aims
Methods
To present selective arterial embolization with N-2-butyl Cyanoacrylate for the palliative and/or adjuvant treatment of painful bone metastases not primarily amenable to surgery. From January 2003 to December 2009, 243 patients (148 men and 95 women; age range, 20-87 years) with painful bone metastases were treated with N-2-butyl Cyanoacrylate. Overall, 309 embolizations were performed; 56 patients had more than one embolization. Embolizations were performed in the pelvis (168 procedures), in the spine (83 procedures), in the upper limb (13 procedures), in the lower limb (38 procedures) and in the thoracic cage (21 procedures). Primary cancer included urogenital, breast, gastrointestinal, thyroid, lung, musculoskeletal, skin, nerve and unknown origin. Renal cell carcinoma was the most commonly treated tumour. In all patients, selective embolization was performed by transfemoral catheterization.Aim
Material and Methods
was to analyze infections after bone tumour surgery. 1463 patients treated from 1976 to 2007 were analized: 1036 with resection and prostheses in the lower limbs, 344 with resection and prostheses in the upper limbs, 83 with surgery for sacral tumours. Infections were analyzed for time of occurrence (“postoperative” in the first 4 weeks from surgery, “early” within 6 months, and “late” after 6 months), microbic agents, treatment, outcome.Aim
Method
To evaluate outcome and complications of knee arthrodesis with a modular prosthetic system (MUTARS(r) Implantcast), as primary and revision implants in musculoskeletal oncology. Between 1975 and 2009, 24 prostheses were used for knee arthrodesis. Nineteen in oncologic cases: 6 osteosarcomas, chondrosarcoma, synovial sarcoma and metastatic carcinoma 3 each, 2 pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS), malignant fibrous hystiocitoma and giant cell tumour 1 each. Patients were grouped into: A) primary implants, B) revision implants. Group A included 9 patients: 8 arthrodeses after extra-articular resection with major soft tissue removal, 1 after primary resection following multiple excisions of locally recurrent PVNS. Group B included 15 patients: 12 arthrodeses for infection (5 infected TKAs, 7 infected megaprostheses), 2 for failures of temporary arthodesis with Kuntscher nail and cement, 1 for recurrent chondrosarcoma in previous arthrodesis.Aim
Method