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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 1 | Pages 93 - 99
1 Jan 2002
Fiorenza F Abudu A Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM Ayoub K Mangham DC Davies AM

We studied 153 patients with non-metastatic chondrosarcoma of bone to determine the risk factors for survival and local tumour control. The minimum follow-up was for five years; 52 patients had axial and 101 appendicular tumours. Surgical treatment was by amputation in 27 and limb-preserving surgery in 126.

The cumulative rate of survival of all patients, at 10 and 15 years, was 70% and 63%, respectively; 40 patients developed a local recurrence between 3 and 87 months after surgery and 49 developed metastases. Local recurrence was associated with poor survival in patients with concomitant metastases but not in those without.

On multivariate analysis independent risk factors for rates of survival include extracompartmental spread, development of local recurrence and high histological grade. Independent risk factors for local recurrence include inadequate surgical margins and tumour size greater than 10 cm. Location within the body, the type of surgery and the duration of symptoms are of no prognostic significance. Surgical excision with an oncologically wide margin provides the best prospect both for cure and local control in these patients.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 4 | Pages 618 - 621
1 May 2001
MAIYA S KHAN T GRIMER RJ CARTER SR TILLMAN RM


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1013 - 1018
1 Sep 2000
Carter PB Stuart PR

We present the results of a retrospective series of 41 Sauve-Kapandji procedures carried out for complications of fractures of the distal radius. All the operations were undertaken by one surgeon with a mean follow-up of 32 months. A total of 37 patients was available for clinical review.

The indications for surgery were pain on the ulnar side of the wrist and decreased rotation of the forearm. Intraperiosteal and extraperiosteal techniques were used for resection of the ulna, with no difference in outcome. Patients were assessed for pain, rotation of the forearm and complications. A Mayo Modified Wrist Score was used.

Pain was improved in 25 of the 37 patients, and unchanged in ten. Rotation of the forearm returned to within 7° of the uninjured side. The results are discussed in relation to the presence of preoperative malunion of the distal radius, age and the functional outcome. Age is not a contraindication for this procedure.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 2 | Pages 255 - 260
1 Mar 2000
Grimer RJ Belthur M Carter SR Tillman RM Cool P

Limb salvage is now customary in the treatment of primary bone tumours. The proximal tibia is a frequent site for these neoplasms but reconstruction, especially in children, is a formidable challenge. We reviewed 20 children with extendible replacements of the proximal tibia, all with a minimum follow-up of five years. Five died from their disease and, of the remaining 15, four had above-knee amputations for complications. Infection occurred in seven patients; in five it was related to the lengthening procedure. Aseptic loosening is inevitable in the younger children and only two have avoided a revision, amputation or other major complication; both were aged 12 years at the time of the initial surgery. Despite this, 11 children are alive with a functioning leg and a mean Musculoskeletal Tumour Society functional score of 83%. The lengthening mechanisms used in our series required extensive open operations. We are now using a simpler, minimally invasive, technique which we hope will decrease the incidence of complications. At present, the use of extendible prostheses of the proximal tibia remains an experimental procedure.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 1 | Pages 62 - 67
1 Jan 2000
Baloch KG Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM

We carried out excision of a solitary bony metastasis from renal-cell carcinoma in 25 patients in the hope that this would produce a prolonged disease-free interval. Two patients had excisions only, five had amputations and 18 had excision and endoprosthetic replacement. The one-, three- and five-year cumulative survival rates were 88%, 54% and 13%, respectively.

There were three complications. One patient developed a local recurrence and three had problems related to the endoprosthesis.

We recommend radical excision of a solitary bony metastasis from renal-cell carcinoma to achieve local control of the tumour for the remainder of the patient’s life.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 1 | Pages 55 - 61
1 Jan 2000
Mitchell AD Ayoub K Mangham DC Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM

Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is a rare, highly malignant variant of chondrosarcoma in which a high-grade spindle-cell sarcoma coexists with a lower-grade chondroid tumour. We have reviewed our experience with this neoplasm in 22 patients, all of whom were treated using modern oncological principles of planned resection and chemotherapy. Despite this the median survival was under nine months and only 18% were alive at five years. Those patients who received chemotherapy, and in whom wide margins of excision were achieved at operation, did best. It is essential to have an accurate preoperative diagnosis in order to plan treatment which may offer a better prospect of cure.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 5 | Pages 796 - 802
1 Sep 1999
Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM Spooner D Mangham DC Kabukcuoglu Y

Over a 25-year period we have treated 36 patients with osteosarcoma of the pelvis. Of the tumours, 24 (67%) were primary osteosarcomas and 12 (33%) arose either after irradiation or in association with Paget’s disease. Six patients had a hindquarter amputation and 12 were treated by a limb-salvage procedure with intrapelvic excision.

The five-year survival rate of all the patients with pelvic osteosarcoma was 18%, while for 17 treated by chemotherapy and surgery it was 41%. The prognosis for patients presenting with metastases or with secondary osteosarcoma was appalling and none survived after 29 months. No patient over the age of 50 years when seen initially survived for a year. Youth and a good response to chemotherapy along with complete surgical excision offer the best chance of cure.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 3 | Pages 488 - 494
1 May 1999
Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM Sneath RS Walker PS Unwin PS Shewell PC

We have performed endoprosthetic replacement after resection of tumours of the proximal tibia on 151 patients over a period of 20 years. During this period limb-salvage surgery was achieved in 88% of patients with tumours of the proximal tibia. Both the implant and the operative technique have been gradually modified in order to reduce complications. An initial rate of infection of 36% has been reduced to 12% by the use of a flap of the medial gastrocnemius, to which the divided patellar tendon is attached. Loosening and breakage of the implant have been further causes of failure. We found that the probability of further surgical procedures being required was 70% at ten years and the risk of amputation, 25%. The development of a new rotating hinge endoprosthesis may lower the incidence of mechanical problems.

Limb salvage for tumours of the proximal tibia is fraught with complications, but the good functional outcome in successful cases justifies its continued use.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 3 | Pages 495 - 500
1 May 1999
Ayoub KS Fiorenza F Grimer RJ Tillman RM Carter SR

We carried out extensible endoprosthetic replacement of the proximal or total humerus in 18 children aged between six and 12 years, after resection of primary bone tumours mainly for osteosarcoma and Ewing’s sarcoma. In 11 patients we performed 44 lengthening procedures, with an average of two per child annually and a mean total extension of 29.9 mm per patient. We were able to achieve lengthening of the operated limb with few complications and a mean functional rating of 79.3% according to the Enneking system. Progressive lengthening of these prostheses does not adversely affect the overall function of the arm, and superior subluxation of the head of the prosthesis has not been a problem.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 2 | Pages 317 - 322
1 Mar 1999
Abudu A Davies AM Pynsent PB Mangham DC Tillman RM Carter SR Grimer RJ

We studied the CT and MR scans, and the histology of 50 patients with primary Ewing’s sarcoma of bone to determine the association between the change in tumour volume and necrosis after chemotherapy, and to ascertain their influence on prognosis. The mean age of the patients was 17 years. The limbs were involved in 40 and the axial bones in ten. The volume of the tumour at diagnosis varied from 31 to 1790 ml.

There was a significant relationship between necrosis and the measured change in volume of the tumour after chemotherapy. Progression of the tumour despite chemotherapy was seen only in patients with necrosis of grades 4 to 6. Necrosis significantly influenced survival (p < 0.05), but the effect of change in volume was less significant.

Change in volume of the tumour is a good predictor of necrosis induced by chemotherapy. Necrosis is a strong prognostic factor in Ewing’s sarcoma.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 6 | Pages 924 - 926
1 Nov 1997
Bhagia SM Elek EM Grimer RJ Carter SR Tillman RM

We reviewed 20 patients after forequarter amputation performed for high-grade malignant tumours of the shoulder girdle (Enneking grades IIB to III). The operations were classified as palliative or curative according to the resection margins and the presence of disseminated disease at the time of the surgery.

There were five palliative and 15 curative procedures. Two patients died from unrelated causes, septicaemia and suicide. Eight died in the first two years, four of whom had had a palliative operation. Four died between two and five years after surgery, one after a palliative operation. Five patients are alive, at a mean of 89.4 months after surgery, four of whom are free from disease. The median survival after a palliative amputation was 20.6 months. Our overall five-year survival (palliative and curative cases) was 21.2%, for curative cases it was 30.2%. None of the patients use an artificial prosthesis.

Despite the disfigurement which results from this operation, it still has a useful role to play in the management of high-grade malignant tumours of the upper limb.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 6 | Pages 938 - 942
1 Nov 1997
Cool WP Carter SR Grimer RJ Tillman RM Walker PS

We report our results in 24 children with malignant primary bone tumours of the distal femur treated with a Stanmore extendible endoprosthesis (SEER). This consists of a femoral component that can be lengthened, a constrained knee and an uncemented sliding tibial component which crosses the proximal tibial physeal plate perpendicularly.

The average age of the patients at diagnosis was ten years and the mean follow-up was 4.7 years (2.5 to 7.9). The mean growth of the affected tibia was 76% (18 to 136) and of the fibula 83% (15 to 750) of the growth of the unaffected limb.

Measurement of growth arrest lines showed that the mean growth of the proximal tibial physis on the affected side was 69% (43 to 100) of that of the normal side. The great variability in the growth of the physis cannot yet be explained.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 5 | Pages 773 - 779
1 Sep 1997
Abudu A Grimer RJ Cannon SR Carter SR Sneath RS

We treated 35 patients with primary malignant tumours of the periacetabular area by resection and prosthetic reconstruction of the defect. At a mean follow-up of 84 months, 15 patients (43%) were free from disease. The most common complications were deep infection (26%), local recurrence (24%) and recurrent dislocation of the hip (17%). The surviving patients achieved an average of 70% of their premorbid function.

This method of reconstruction has a high morbidity and should be performed only at specialist centres, but the functional and oncological outcomes are satisfactory.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 4 | Pages 558 - 561
1 Jul 1997
Grimer RJ Carter SR Pynsent PB

The use of endoprostheses for limb salvage in primary bone tumours is highly specialised. Studies have shown no significant difference in survival, function or quality of life between patients with limb salvage and those with amputation.

We have derived a formula for calculating the ongoing costs of limb salvage with an endoprosthesis which is based on actual costs and uses historical data to show the likelihood of further surgery or revision. Comparative data for amputation are also shown. Using current prices, the cost-effectiveness of surgery with an endoprosthesis is clearly demonstrated.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 269 - 272
1 Mar 1997
Abraham P Carter D Millot JR Leftheriotis G Pidhorz L Saumet JL

We studied the time course of micro-embolism by recording high intensity transient signals (HITS) on Doppler venous blood flow studies during a 7-day period in 57 of 63 consecutive patients after hip or knee replacement.

No HITS were found before surgery, or in the non-operated leg after surgery. In the operated leg, the median number of HITS per minute showed an exponential decrease with time; a 50% reduction in the number of HITS took 72 minutes. Regardless of the duration and severity of HITS, we found no clinically apparent embolic event. Colour Doppler imaging at days 8 to 10 after operation showed a deep venous thrombosis in 17% of our patients with one thrombosis of the long saphenous vein. The presence or severity of HITS did not predict the venous thrombi. Although we found no pulmonary complications, we detected micro-emboli over a longer period after surgery than is usually reported. Spectral analysis of the Doppler venous signal is a repeatable and non-invasive monitoring technique in the post-surgical period. We failed to prove a correlation between deep venous thrombi and micro-emboli detected by this method.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 171 - 171
1 Jan 1997
GRIMER RJ CARTER SR TILLMAN RM


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 5 | Pages 694 - 698
1 Sep 1996
Abudu A Sferopoulos NK Tillman RM Carter SR Grimer RJ

We reviewed the surgical treatment and oncological results of 40 patients with pathological fractures from localised osteosarcoma of the long bones to determine the outcome of limb salvage in their management. All had had adjuvant chemotherapy. There were 26 males and 14 females with a median age at diagnosis of 18 years (2 to 46) and a median follow-up of 55 months (8 to 175).

We performed limb salvage in 27 patients and amputation in 13. The margins of resection were radical in five patients, wide in 26, marginal in six, wide but contaminated in two and intralesional in one. Local recurrence developed in 19% of those treated by limb salvage and in none of those who had an amputation. The cumulative five-year survival of all the patients was 57% and in those treated by limb salvage or amputation it was 64% and 47%, respectively (p > 0.05).

Limb-sparing surgery with adequate margins of excision can be achieved in many patients with pathological fractures from primary osteosarcoma without compromising survival, but the risk of local recurrence is significant.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 4 | Pages 652 - 657
1 Jul 1996
Abudu A Carter SR Grimer RJ

Improvement in the life expectancy of patients with primary bone tumours has led to increased emphasis on limb salvage and preservation of function.

Between 1979 and 1994 we used custom-made endoprostheses in 18 patients to reconstruct diaphyseal defects after excision of primary bone tumours. The mean age at operation was 26 years (9 to 64) and the median follow-up 65 months (6 to 188).

Fifteen patients have survived and are free from local or metastatic disease. Local recurrence developed in one patient. Using the modified Enneking functional scoring system, 77% of the patients achieved 80% or more of their premorbid functional capability. Mechanical loosening, limb shortening and secondary osteoarthritis were the main complications. There were no infections.

We conclude that diaphyseal endoprostheses offer a good clinical and functional outcome in the lower limb.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 1 | Pages 167 - 167
1 Jan 1996
CARTER S


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 3 | Pages 505 - 506
1 May 1993
Hopper J Carter


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 490 - 493
1 May 1990
Carter Eastwood D Grimer R Sneath R

We reviewed 34 hindquarter amputations performed for malignant tumours around the hip from 1971 to 1988, classifying them as palliative or curative according to the resection margins or the presence of disseminated disease at the time of surgery. There were three peri-operative deaths, 12 palliative and 19 curative procedures. Ten patients died of disseminated disease within a year of surgery, eight of whom had had a palliative operation. Three patients died between one and five years after palliative surgery. One died of unrelated disease at nine years. Seventeen patients are disease free an average of 31 months from surgery, 16 after curative procedures. The median survival after palliative amputations was six months and the 5-year survival rate for curative cases was 83%.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 5 | Pages 834 - 836
1 Nov 1988
Carter Aldridge M

We report 21 cases of stress injury of the distal radial growth plate-occurring in gymnasts before skeletal maturity. The injury appears to be caused by inability of the growth plate to withstand rotational and compressive forces. Our observations have confirmed that the skeletal age of gymnasts is retarded, which increases the length of time during which the epiphysis is at risk of damage.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 5 | Pages 843 - 844
1 Nov 1987
Carter


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 625 - 627
1 Nov 1984
Hamblen D Carter R



The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 40 - 45
1 Feb 1964
Carter C Wilkinson J

1. General joint laxity affecting more than three joints was found in 7 per cent of normal schoolchildren. Similar laxity was found in fourteen of a random series of forty-eight girls, and in nineteen of twenty-six boys, with non-familial congenital dislocation of the hip. Such laxity was also found in four of seven girls and five of seven boys with familial (first degree relative affected) congenital dislocation of the hip.

2. It is concluded that persistent generalised joint laxity, which is often familial, is an important predisposing factor to congenital dislocation of the hip in boys. It is less important in girls, except perhaps in familial cases, as in girls there is an alternative temporary hormonal cause of joint laxity.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 2 | Pages 217 - 219
1 May 1961
Carter CO


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 4 | Pages 669 - 688
1 Nov 1960
Wilkinson J Carter C

1. The histories of 149 patients, coming to the Hospital for Sick Children within the first three years of life with congenital dislocation of the hip (191 dislocated hips), and treated by conservative methods, have been reviewed.

2. The patients with unilateral dislocations (107) have been divided into three groups, according to the angle of slope of the opposite acetabulum. This angle was measured on the first radiograph and related to the mean value for age and sex.

3. The opposite hip was classed as "normal" if the acetabular angle was below or within one standard deviation above the mean for sex and age; as "moderately shallow" if it was between one and two standard deviations above the mean; and as "shallow" if it was over two standard deviations above the mean. This grouping was found to have a direct bearing on the results of conservative treatment in unilateral cases. a) Those with "normal" opposite acetabula–accounting for most of the unilateral cases–responded well. b) Those with "moderately shallow" opposite acetabula responded variably. c) The group with "shallow" opposite acetabula usually failed to respond.

4. Most bilateral dislocations behaved as unilateral dislocations with shallow opposite hips.

5. Additional factors influencing the response to conservative treatment–sex, age at first attendance, family history, fragmentation of the femoral epiphysis and eccentric reduction–are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 4 | Pages 721 - 727
1 Nov 1960
Carter C Sweetnam R

An inquiry was made of ninety-seven patients with recurrent dislocation of the patella and forty patients with recurrent dislocation of the shoulder to see how often they had a relative similarly affected, and also how often such dislocation is associated with, and perhaps caused by, familial joint laxity.

Ten of those with recurrent dislocation of the patella and two of those with recurrent dislocation of the shoulder were found to have a near relative with a similar dislocation. Familial joint laxity was found in two of the ten families with more than one member affected by recurrent patellar dislocation, and in both those with more than one member with recurrent dislocation of the shoulder. Familial joint laxity was also found in two out of twenty patients with recurrent dislocation of the patella who had no family history of similar dislocation; but in none out of twenty patients with recurrent dislocation of the shoulder and who had no family history of similar dislocation.

Familial joint laxity may be the only cause of recurrent dislocation of the shoulder occurring in more than one member of the family. But there are other, as yet undefined, causes of familial recurrent dislocation of the patella.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 4 | Pages 664 - 667
1 Nov 1958
Carter C Sweetnam R

The family we record draws attention to an association between recurrent dislocation of the patella and joint laxity, which is not confined to the knee. This may pass unrecognised if specific inquiry is not made. In this and other families reported, the joint laxity is inherited, as though due to a dominant gene, but some only of those affected suffer recurrent dislocation of the patella. It is probable that there are other genetically determined causes of recurrent patellar dislocation. In three other families we have seen more than one subject of patellar dislocation, but none had lax ligaments, and two other families have been recorded with no mention of associated joint laxity.