Literature DB >> 21515523

Pathological femoral fracture caused by primary bone tumour: a population-based study.

K Godley1, A C Watts, J E Robb.   

Abstract

This population-based study aimed to analyse the demographic, clinical and histological features of patients with a malignant primary bone tumour of the femur presenting with a pathological fracture. Eighty-four patients were identified from a prospectively gathered national tumour database between 1960 and 2004. Demographic data, presenting features, tumour location, histological diagnosis, treatment, local recurrence, metastasis and survival data were gathered. An estimate of the annual incidence was obtained using population data from the General Register Office and was 0.4 per million population per annum. The mean age was 56 years (range 4-87 years) with a bimodal distribution and 46% were men or boys. Forty-one percent of patients presented with a history of trauma. The average duration of symptoms before presentation was 1-3 months. The most common histological diagnoses were osteosarcoma (14 patients) and Paget's sarcoma (12 patients). The local recurrence rate was 38% and the overall five-year survival was 22%. The prognosis was made worse by local tumour recurrence, the development of metastasis and age at diagnosis greater than 21 years. Limb salvage surgery did not alter the prognosis. Patients who present with pathological fracture of a primary malignant bone tumour, carry a poor prognosis in all tumour types and no improvement in survival was identified over the period of the study.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21515523     DOI: 10.1258/smj.2010.010006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scott Med J        ISSN: 0036-9330            Impact factor:   0.729


  4 in total

1.  Meta-analysis of the prognosis after surgical treatment of osteosarcoma complicated by pathologic fracture.

Authors:  Wei Zhong; Ziyi Wu; Yuhao Yuan; Wei Luo
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2022-04-15       Impact factor: 3.940

Review 2.  Limb-salvage surgery offers better five-year survival rate than amputation in patients with limb osteosarcoma treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Evgenia Papakonstantinou; Alexandros Stamatopoulos; Dimitrios I Athanasiadis; Efstathios Kenanidis; Michael Potoupnis; Anna-Bettina Haidich; Eleftherios Tsiridis
Journal:  J Bone Oncol       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 4.072

3.  Meta-analysis of limb salvage versus amputation for treating high-grade and localized osteosarcoma in patients with pathological fracture.

Authors:  Ke Yin; Qiande Liao; DA Zhong; Jie Ding; Bing Niu; Qiupping Long; Dengfeng Ding
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2012-08-28       Impact factor: 2.447

Review 4.  A comparative study between limb-salvage and amputation for treating osteosarcoma.

Authors:  Xiaojuan Li; Ya Zhang; Shanshan Wan; Huiling Li; Dongqi Li; Junfeng Xia; Zhongqin Yuan; Mingyan Ren; Shunling Yu; Su Li; Yihao Yang; Lei Han; Zuozhang Yang
Journal:  J Bone Oncol       Date:  2016-01-23       Impact factor: 4.072

  4 in total

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