Aims. Our aim was to develop and validate nomograms that would predict the cumulative incidence of sarcoma-specific death (CISSD) and disease progression (CIDP) in patients with localized high-grade primary central and dedifferentiated
Aims.
Aims. The preoperative grading of
Aims. The aim of this study was to report the outcomes of patients who underwent definitive surgery for secondary
The February 2023 Oncology Roundup. 360. looks at: Is the number of national database research studies in musculoskeletal sarcoma increasing, and are these studies reliable?; Re-excision after unplanned excision of soft-tissue sarcoma is associated with high morbidity; Adjuvant radiation in atypical lipomatous tumours; The oncological outcomes of isolated limb perfusion and neoadjuvant radiotherapy in soft-tissue sarcoma patients - a nationwide multicentre study; Can low-grade
Aims. Hip reconstruction after resection of a periacetabular
Aims. The purpose of this study was to describe the effect of histological
grade on disease-specific survival in patients with
Aims. Few studies dealing with
Aims. Although
Aims. The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential for achieving local and systemic control after local recurrence of a
The aim of this study was to define the treatment
criteria for patients with recurrent
We reviewed 124 patients with a conventional pelvic
Aims. Controversy exists as to what should be considered a safe resection margin to minimize local recurrence in high-grade pelvic
The features are described of seven cases of "juxtacortical"
Sixty-two cases of
Aims. The purpose of this retrospective study was to differentiate
between the MRI features of normal post-operative change and those
of residual or recurrent disease after intralesional treatment of
an atypical cartilage tumour (ACT)/grade I
1.
Dedifferentiated
Synovial chondromatosis is a rare condition in which osteocartilaginous nodules are formed by synovial metaplasia and become intra-articular loose bodies. It is usually monarticular, most commonly affecting the knee and is regarded as invariably benign. There are reports of malignant change, but only the two case studies of Mullins, Berard and Eisenberg (1965) and of Dunn et al. (1974) fully document the development of
Multiple hereditary exostoses is an autosomal dominant skeletal disorder in which there are numerous cartilage-capped excrescences in areas of actively growing bone. The condition is genetically heterogeneous, and at least three genes, ext1, ext2 and ext3 are involved. The reported risk for malignant transformation to