Due to the complex anatomy of the pelvis, limb-sparing resections
of pelvic tumours achieving adequate surgical margins, can often
be difficult. The advent of computer navigation has improved the
precision of resection of these lesions, though there is little
evidence comparing resection with or without the assistance of navigation. Our aim was to evaluate the efficacy of navigation-assisted surgery
for the resection of pelvic bone tumours involving the posterior
ilium and sacrum. Using our prospectively updated institutional database, we conducted
a retrospective case control study of 21 patients who underwent
resection of the posterior ilium and sacrum, for the treatment of
a primary sarcoma of bone, between 1987 and 2015. The resection
was performed with the assistance of navigation in nine patients
and without navigation in 12. We assessed the accuracy of navigation-assisted
surgery, as defined by the surgical margin and how this affects
the rate of local recurrence, the disease-free survival and the
effects on peri-and post-operative morbidity. Aims
Patients and Methods
Few studies dealing with chondrosarcoma of the pelvis are currently
available. Different data about the overall survival and prognostic
factors have been published but without a detailed analysis of surgery-related complications.
We aimed to analyse the outcome of a series of pelvic chondrosarcomas
treated at a single institution, with particular attention to the
prognostic factors. Based on a competing risk model, our objective
was to identify risk factors for the development of complications. In a retrospective single-centre study, 58 chondrosarcomas (26
patients alive, 32 patients dead) of the pelvis were reviewed. The
mean follow-up was 13 years (one week to 23.1 years).Aims
Patients and Methods
The purpose of the study was to investigate whether closed intramedullary
(IM) nailing with percutaneous cement augmentation is better than
conventional closed nailing at relieving pain and suppressing tumours
in patients with metastases of the femur and humerus. A total of 43 patients (27 men, 16 women, mean age 63.7 years,
standard deviation (Aims
Patients and Methods
We report positive and negative factors associated with the most commonly-used methods of reconstruction after pathological fracture of the proximal femur. The study was based on 142 patients treated surgically for 146 metastatic lesions between 1996 and 2003. The local rate of failure was 10.3% (15 of 146). Of 37 operations involving osteosynthetic devices, six failed (16.2%) compared with nine (8.3%) in 109 operations involving endoprostheses. Of nine cases of prosthetic failure, four were due to periprosthetic fractures and three to recurrent dislocation. In the osteosynthesis group, three (13.6%) of 22 reconstruction nails failed. The two-year risk of re-operation after any type of osteosynthesis was 0.35 compared with 0.18 after any type of endoprosthetic reconstruction (p = 0.07). Endoprosthetic reconstructions are preferable to the use of reconstruction nails and other osteosynthetic devices for the treatment of metastatic lesions in the proximal third of the femur.