Peri-prosthetic osteolysis and subsequent aseptic
loosening is the most common reason for revising total hip replacements.
Wear particles originating from the prosthetic components interact
with multiple cell types in the peri-prosthetic region resulting
in an inflammatory process that ultimately leads to peri-prosthetic
bone loss. These cells include macrophages, osteoclasts, osteoblasts
and fibroblasts. The majority of research in peri-prosthetic osteolysis
has concentrated on the role played by osteoclasts and macrophages.
The purpose of this review is to assess the role of the osteoblast
in peri-prosthetic osteolysis. In peri-prosthetic osteolysis, wear particles may affect osteoblasts
and contribute to the osteolytic process by two mechanisms. First,
particles and metallic ions have been shown to inhibit the osteoblast
in terms of its ability to secrete mineralised bone matrix, by reducing
calcium deposition, alkaline phosphatase activity and its ability
to proliferate. Secondly, particles and metallic ions have been
shown to stimulate osteoblasts to produce pro inflammatory mediators Cite this article:
We investigated the clinical outcome of internal
fixation for pathological fracture of the femur after primary excision of
a soft-tissue sarcoma that had been treated with adjuvant radiotherapy. A review of our database identified 22 radiation-induced fractures
of the femur in 22 patients (seven men, 15 women). We noted the
mechanism of injury, fracture pattern and any complications after
internal fixation, including nonunion, hardware failure, secondary
fracture or deep infection. The mean age of the patients at primary excision of the tumour
was 58.3 years (39 to 86). The mean time from primary excision to
fracture was 73.2 months (2 to 195). The mean follow-up after fracture
fixation was 65.9 months (12 to 205). Complications occurred in
19 patients (86%). Nonunion developed in 18 patients (82%), of whom
11 had a radiological nonunion at 12 months, five a nonunion and
hardware failure and two an infected nonunion. One patient developed
a second radiation-associated fracture of the femur after internal
fixation and union of the initial fracture. A total of 13 patients
(59%) underwent 24 revision operations. Internal fixation of a pathological fracture of the femur after
radiotherapy for a soft-tissue sarcoma has an extremely high rate
of complication and requires specialist attention. Cite this article:
Custom-made intercalary endoprostheses may be used for the reconstruction of diaphyseal defects following the resection of bone tumours. The aim of this study was to determine the survival of intercalary endoprostheses with a lap joint design, and to evaluate the clinical results, complications and functional outcome. We retrospectively reviewed six consecutive patients, three of whom underwent limb salvage with intercalary endoprostheses of the tibia, two of the femur, and one of the humerus. Their mean age was 42 years (28 to 64). The mean follow-up was 21.6 months (9 to 58). The humeral prosthesis required revision at 14 months owing to aseptic loosening. There were no implant-related failures. Musculoskeletal Tumour Society functional outcome scores indicated that patients achieved 90% of premorbid function. Custom intercalary endoprostheses result in reconstructions comparable with, if not better than, those of allografts. Using this design of implant reduces the incidence of early complications and difficulties experienced with previous versions.
We evaluated 31 patients who were treated with a non-vascularised fibular graft after resection of primary musculoskeletal tumours, with a median follow-up of 5.6 years (3 to 26.7 years). Primary union was achieved in 89% (41 of 46) of the grafts in a median period of 24 weeks. All 25 grafts in 18 patients without additional chemotheraphy and/or radiotherapy achieved primary union, compared with 16 of the 21 grafts (76%; 13 patients) with additional therapy (p = 0.017). Radiographs showed an increase in diameter in 70% (59) of the grafts. There were seven fatigue fractures in six patients, but only two needed treatment. Non-vascularised fibular transfer is a simpler, less expensive and a shorter procedure than the use of vascularised grafts and allows remodelling of the fibula at the donor site. It is a biological reconstruction with good long-term results, and a relatively low donor site complication rate of 16%.
Osteofibrous dysplasia is an unusual developmental condition of childhood, which almost exclusively affects the tibia. It is thought to follow a slowly progressive course and to stabilise after skeletal maturity. The possible link with adamantinoma is controversial and some authors believe that they are part of one histological process. We retrospectively reviewed 16 patients who were diagnosed as having osteofibrous dysplasia initially or on the final histological examination. Their management was diverse, depending on the severity of symptoms and the extent of the lesion. Definitive (extraperiosteal) surgery was localised ‘shark-bite’ excision for small lesions in five patients. Extensive lesions were treated by segmental excision and fibular autograft in six patients, external fixation and bone transport in four and proximal tibial replacement in one. One patient who had a fibular autograft required further excision and bone transport for recurrence. Six initially underwent curettage and all had recurrence. There were no recurrences after localised extraperiosteal excision or bone transport. There were three confirmed cases of adamantinoma. The relevant literature is reviewed. We recommend extraperiosteal excision in all cases of osteofibrous dysplasia, with segmental excision and reconstruction in more extensive lesions.
There is currently no consensus about the mean
volume of blood lost during spinal tumour surgery and surgery for metastatic
spinal disease. We conducted a systematic review of papers published
in the English language between 31 January 1992 and 31 January 2012.
Only papers that clearly presented blood loss data in spinal surgery
for metastatic disease were included. The random effects model was
used to obtain the pooled estimate of mean blood loss. We selected 18 papers, including six case series, ten retrospective
reviews and two prospective studies. Altogether, there were 760
patients who had undergone spinal tumour surgery and surgery for
metastatic spinal disease. The pooled estimate of peri-operative
blood loss was 2180 ml (95% confidence interval 1805 to 2554) with catastrophic
blood loss as high as 5000 ml, which is rare. Aside from two studies
that reported large amounts of mean blood loss (>
5500 ml), the
resulting funnel plot suggested an absence of publication bias.
This was confirmed by Egger’s test, which did not show any small-study
effects
(p = 0.119). However, there was strong evidence of heterogeneity
between studies (I2 = 90%; p <
0.001). Spinal surgery for metastatic disease is associated with significant
blood loss and the possibility of catastrophic blood loss. There
is a need to establish standardised methods of calculating and reporting
this blood loss. Analysis should include assessment by area of the
spine, primary pathology and nature of surgery so that the amount
of blood loss can be predicted. Consideration should be given to
autotransfusion in these patients. Cite this article:
There have been only a few small studies of patients
with an infected shoulder replacement treated with a single-stage
exchange procedure. We retrospectively reviewed 35 patients (19 men
and 16 women) with a peri-prosthetic infection of the shoulder who
were treated in this way. A total of 26 were available for clinical
examination; three had died, two were lost to follow-up and four
patients had undergone revision surgery. The mean follow-up time was
4.7 years (1.1 to 13.25), with an infection-free survival of 94%. The organisms most commonly isolated intra-operatively were Single-stage exchange is a successful and practical treatment
for patients with peri-prosthetic infection of the shoulder. Cite this article:
We reviewed retrospectively the results in 211 consecutive patients who had undergone limb salvage for bone neoplasia with endoprosthetic reconstruction of the proximal femur (96), distal femur (78), proximal tibia (30) and total femur (7). Their mean age was 50 years (11 to 86) and the mean follow-up period was 37.3 months (1 to 204). A total of 35 (16.6%) prostheses failed. Overall, implant survival was 78% (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.29 to 0.54) at five years, 60% (95% CI 0.93 to 2.35) at ten years and 60% (95% CI 1.27 to 3.88) at 15 years. Survivorship of the limb was 97.6% (95% CI 1.73 to 3.35) at ten years. The gender, age, diagnosis and location of the tumour were not prognostic variables for failure. Modular endoprosthetic replacement in the lower limb is a durable long-term reconstructive option, with the implants generally outlasting the patient.
We reviewed 25 patients who had undergone resection of a primary bone sarcoma which extended to within 5 cm of the knee with reconstruction by a combination of a free vascularised fibular graft and a massive allograft bone shell. The distal femur was affected in four patients and the proximal tibia in 21. Their mean age at the time of operation was 19.7 years (5 to 52) and the mean follow-up period 140 months (28 to 213). Three vascularised transfers failed. The mean time to union of the fibula was 5.6 months (3 to 10) and of the allograft 19.6 months (10 to 34). Full weight-bearing was allowed at a mean of 21.4 months (14 to 36). The mean functional score at final follow-up was 27.4 (18 to 30) using a modfied 30-point Musculoskeletal Tumour Society rating system. The overall limb-salvage rate was 88%. The results of our study suggest that the combined use of a vascularised fibular graft and allograft is of value as a limb-salvage procedure for intercalary reconstruction after resection of bone tumours around the knee, especially in skeletally immature patients.
Between 1966 and 2001, 1254 patients underwent excision of a bone tumour with endoprosthetic replacement. All patients who had radiotherapy were identified. Their clinical details were retrieved from their records. A total of 63 patients (5%) had received adjunctive radiotherapy, 29 pre-operatively and 34 post-operatively. The mean post-operative Musculoskeletal Tumor Society scores of irradiated patients were significantly lower (log-rank test, p = 0.009). The infection rate in the group who had not been irradiated was 9.8% (117 of 1191), compared with 20.7% (6 of 29) in those who had pre-operative radiotherapy and 35.3% (12 of 34) in those who radiotherapy post-operatively. The infection-free survival rate at ten years was 85.5% for patients without radiotherapy, 74.1% for those who had pre-operative radiotherapy and 44.8% for those who had post-operative radiotherapy (log-rank test, p <
0.001). The ten-year limb salvage rate was 89% for those who did not have radiotherapy and 76% for those who did (log-rank test, p = 0.02). Radiotherapy increased the risk of revision (log-rank test, p = 0.015). A total of ten amputations were necessary to control infection, of which nine were successful. Radiotherapy may be necessary for the treatment of a bone sarcoma but increases the risk of deep infection for which amputation may be the only solution.
The April 2012 Oncology Roundup360 looks at chondrosarcoma of the cervical spine, if excision margins matter, radiation-induced sarcomas, giant cell tumours and bone cement, enchondromatosis and malignant change, axial or appendicular Ewing’s sarcoma, and diagnosing a sarcoma
The use of a navigation system in musculoskeletal tumour surgery enables the integration of pre-operative CT and MRI images to generate a precise three-dimensional anatomical model of the site and the extent of the tumour. We carried out six consecutive resections of musculoskeletal tumour in five patients using an existing commercial computer navigation system. There were three women and two men with a mean age of 41 years (24 to 47). Reconstruction was performed using a tumour prosthesis in three lesions and a vascularised fibular graft in one. No reconstruction was needed in two cases. The mean follow-up was 6.9 months (3.5 to 10). The mean duration of surgery was 28 minutes (13 to 50). Examination of the resected specimens showed clear margins in all the tumour lesions and a resection that was exactly as planned.
We evaluated the construct validity of the Musculoskeletal Tumour Society rating scale (Enneking score) as a functional measure for patients with sarcoma involving the upper limb. We compared the Enneking score by examining the correlation between two patient-derived outcome measures, the Disability of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (DASH) questionnaire and the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-36 (SF-36) as indicators of functional status in 40 patients with malignant or aggressive benign bone and soft-tissue tumours of the upper limb who had undergone surgical treatment. The frequency distributions were similar among the three scoring systems. As for the validity, Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient of the Enneking score to the DASH questionnaire was −0.79 and that of the Enneking to the SF-36 subscales ranged from 0.38 to 0.60. Despite being a measure from the surgeon’s perspective, the Enneking score was shown to be a valid indicator of physical disability in patients with malignant or aggressive benign tumours of the upper limb and reflected their opinion.
We retrospectively reviewed 101 consecutive patients
with 114 femoral tumours treated by massive bone allograft at our
institution between 1986 and 2005. There were 49 females and 52
males with a mean age of 20 years (4 to 74). At a median follow-up
of 9.3 years (2 to 19.8), 36 reconstructions (31.5%) had failed.
The allograft itself failed in 27 reconstructions (24%). Mechanical complications such as delayed union, fracture and
failure of fixation were studied. The most adverse factor on the
outcome was the use of intramedullary nails, followed by post-operative
chemotherapy, resection length >
17 cm and age >
18 years at the
time of intervention. The simultaneous use of a vascularised fibular
graft to protect the allograft from mechanical complications improved
the outcome, but the use of intramedullary cementing was not as
successful. In order to improve the strength of the reconstruction and to
advance the biology of host–graft integration, we suggest avoiding
the use of intramedullary nails and titanium plates, but instead
using stainless steel plates, as these gave better results. The
use of a supplementary vascularised fibular graft should be strongly
considered in adult patients with resection >
17 cm and in those
who require post-operative chemotherapy.
We describe a 23-year-old woman with neuritis ossificans involving the tibial, common peroneal and lateral sural nerves. She presented with chronic debilitating posterior knee pain. An MRI scan showed masses in these nerves, biopsy of which revealed a histological diagnosis of neuritis ossificans. Treatment with OxyContin and Neurotin for two years resulted in resolution of symptoms. Follow-up MRI demonstrated a resolution of two of the three masses. There was a persistent area of ossification without associated oedema in the common peroneal nerve. Neuritis ossificans has the histological appearance of myositis ossificans and follows a similar clinical course. The success of conservative treatment in this case suggests that the potential complications of surgical excision can be avoided.
Between 1996 and 2003, 16 patients (nine female, seven male) were treated for a primary bone sarcoma of the femur by wide local excision of the tumour, extracorporeal irradiation and re-implantation. An additional vascularised fibular graft was used in 13 patients (81%). All patients were free from disease when reviewed at a minimum of two years postoperatively (mean 49.7 months (24 to 96). There were no cases of infection. Primary union was achieved after a median of nine months (interquartile range 7 to 11). Five host-donor junctions (16%) united only after a second procedure. Primary union recurred faster at metaphyseal junctions (94% (15) at a median of 7.5 months (interquartile range 4 to 12)) than at diaphyseal junctions (75% (12) at a median of 11.1 months (interquartile range 5 to 18)). Post-operatively, the median Musculoskeletal Tumour Society score was 85% (interquartile range 75 to 96) and the median Toronto Extremity Salvage score 94% (interquartile range 82 to 99). The Mankin score gave a good or excellent result in 14 patients (88%). The range of movement of the knee was significantly worse when the extracorporeally irradiated autografts were fixed by plates rather than by nails (p = 0.035). A total of 16 (62%) of the junctions of the vascularised fibular grafts underwent hypertrophy, indicating union and loading. Extracorporeal irradiation autografting with supplementary vascularised fibular grafting is a promising biological alternative for intercalary reconstruction after wide resection of malignant bone tumours of the femur.
We report the results of the treatment of nine children with an aneurysmal bone cyst of the distal fibula (seven cysts were juxtaphyseal, and two metaphyseal). The mean age of the children was 10 years and 3 months (7 years and 4 months to 12 years and 9 months). All had open physes. All cysts were active and in seven cases substituted and expanded the entire width of the bone (type-2 lesions). The mean longitudinal extension was 5.7 cm (3 to 10). The presenting symptoms were pain, swelling and pathological fracture. Moderate fibular shortening was evident in one patient. In six patients curettage was performed, using phenol as adjuvant in three. Three with juxtaphyseal lesions underwent resection. A graft from the contralateral fibula (one case) and allografts (two cases) were positioned at the edge of the physis for reconstruction. The mean follow-up was 11.6 years (3.1 to 27.5). There was no recurrence. At the final follow-up there was no significant difference in the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society scores (excellent/good in all cases) and in growth disturbance, alignment, stability and bone reconstitution, but in the resection group the number of operations, including removal of hardware, complications (two minor) and time of immobilisation/orthosis, were increased. Movement of the ankle was restricted in one patient. The potential risks in the management of these lesions include recurrence, physeal injury, instability of the ankle and hardware and graft complications. Although resection is effective it should be reserved for aggressive or recurrent juxtaphyseal lesions.
Recent events have highlighted the importance
of implant design for survival and wear-related complications following
metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty. The mid-term survival
of the most widely used implant, the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing
(BHR), has been described by its designers. The aim of this study
was to report the ten-year survival and patient-reported functional
outcome of the BHR from an independent centre. In this cohort of 554 patients (646 BHRs) with a mean age of
51.9 years (16.5 to 81.5) followed for a mean of eight years (1
to 12), the survival and patient-reported functional outcome depended
on gender and the size of the implant. In female hips (n = 267)
the ten-year survival was 74% (95% confidence interval (CI) 83 to
91), the ten-year revision rate for pseudotumour was 7%, the mean
Oxford hip score (OHS) was 43 ( This study supports the ongoing use of resurfacing in young active
men, who are a subgroup of patients who tend to have problems with
conventional THR. In contrast, the results in women have been poor
and we do not recommend metal-on-metal resurfacing in women. Continuous
follow-up is recommended because of the increasing incidence of
pseudotumour with the passage of time.
We reviewed our initial seven-year experience
with a non-invasive extendible prosthesis in 34 children with primary bone
tumours. The distal femur was replaced in 25 cases, total femur
in five, proximal femur in one and proximal tibia in three. The
mean follow-up was 44 months (15 to 86) and 27 patients (79%) remain
alive. The prostheses were lengthened by an electromagnetic induction
mechanism in an outpatient setting and a mean extension of 32 mm
(4 to 80) was achieved without anaesthesia. There were lengthening
complications in two children: failed lengthening in one and the
formation of scar tissue in the other. Deep infection developed
in six patients (18%) and local recurrence in three. A total of
11 patients required further surgery to the leg. Amputation was
necessary in five patients (20%) and a two-stage revision in another.
There were no cases of loosening, but two patients had implant breakage
and required revision. The mean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society functional
score was 85% (60% to 100%) at last known follow-up. These early
results demonstrate that the non-invasive extendible prosthesis
allows successful lengthening without surgical intervention, but
the high incidence of infection is a cause for concern.