| Literature DB >> 26640752 |
Jungo Imanishi1, Damien Grinsell2, Peter F M Choong3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Reconstruction after wide resection for a sarcoma involving the knee extensor mechanism is challenging even if the tumor is small. CASE DESCRIPTION: We report on four consecutive peri-patellar tendon sarcomas treated similarly at a single institution. Histological diagnoses were synovial sarcoma (two cases), clear cell sarcoma and extraskeletal Ewing's sarcoma (one case each). Follow-up periods after surgery were 18-67 months. All cases underwent pre-operative radiotherapy and subsequent surgery. After preoperative radiotherapy and wide resection including the patellar tendon, bone-patellar tendon-bone allograft was fixed to the residual patella and tibial tuberosity with screws and a cable wire. Soft tissue and skin defect over allograft was covered by free antero-lateral thigh flap. Post-operatively, the operated knee was splinted straight for at least 6 weeks, and then range-of-motion exercise was gradually introduced. Except for one case with a proximal tibial stress fracture 5 months post-operatively, no complication was observed. Both bone-bone junctions between allograft and residual bones were united within 1 year after surgery. At the latest clinical follow-up, all the patients had satisfactory functions with Musculoskeletal Tumor Society score of 28-30 out of 30 points and virtually full range of motion. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: This case series is the first to report bone-patellar tendon-bone allograft for reconstruction after tumor resection with joint preservation and with satisfactory clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Allograft; Knee extension mechanism; Patellar tendon; Reconstruction; Soft tissue sarcoma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26640752 PMCID: PMC4661164 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1510-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Summary of 4 cases in this series
| No. | Age, sex | Diagnosis | Tumor location | Follow-up | Functions | Complication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 26, M | Synovial sarcoma | Infrapatellar region | 67 months | MSTS score: 30/30 | None |
| 2 | 56, M | Clear cell sarcoma | Infrapatellar region | 48 months | MSTS score: 30/30 | None |
| 3 | 28, M | Ewing’s sarcoma | Infrapatellar region | 30 months | MSTS score: 30/30 | None |
| 4 | 72, M | Synovial sarcoma | Abutting on the proximal tibia | 18 months | MSTS score: 28/30 | Stress fracture |
M male, MSTS musculoskeletal tumor society, ROM range of motion
Summary of post-operative management in this series
| ROM | Weight bearing, activity | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 Immediately after surgery | Operated knee kept straight in splint | FWB in splint with crutches |
| 2 6–12a weeks after surgery | Gentle ROM exercise, passive and active, started | FWB without crutch, gradually removing splint/brace |
| 3 6 weeks after (2) | Progressive ROM allowed | FWB without splint/brace, no sports activity |
| 4 1 year after surgery | No restriction | No restriction |
ROM range of motion, FWB full weight bearing
aThe duration differed from case to case
Fig. 1Radiologic studies and photographs of patient 1. a T1 gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance images at the first presentation show inflammation in the infrapatellar fat pad after unplanned excision. b Photographs show intra-operative field before and after allograft reconstruction. White arrows and black arrows point screws and a cable wire system, respectively. c Both bone–bone junctions between allograft and residual bones were united at 11 months after surgery. T tibia, F femoral joint surface, P patella
Fig. 2A photograph of the operated knee 4 years post-operatively (patient 1). No extension lag of the operated knee was observed
Fig. 3Radiologic studies and photographs of patient 4. a T1 gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance images of at the first presentation demonstrate partial tumor invasion into the lateral cortex of the proximal tibia (arrow). b After allograft reconstruction, the proximal tibia was reinforced with a lateral proximal tibial plate and screws. c Radiographs show a stress fracture in the proximal tibia 5 months post-operatively. A black arrow and white arrow point a thin oblique fracture line and posterior fracture-associated callus formation, respectively
Previous case reports on patellar tendon reconstruction after sarcoma resections
| Author (year) | Resected tissue | Reconstruction | FU | Functional results complication(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muramatsu et al. ( | Q, P, PT | Recycling (liquid nitrogen) | 18 M | ROM: 0°–10°–110° |
| Nakashima et al. ( | PT | Fascia lata with iliac bone | 3 Y | ROM: 0°–110° |
| Osanai et al. ( | P, PT | Gastrocnemius muscle flap, Achilles tendon | 1 Y | Extension lag 5° |
| Peyser and Makley ( | PT | Biceps tendon-osseous graft, ST tendon, wiring | 4 Y | Full function |
| Machens et al. ( | P, PT | Latismus dorsi flap only | 3 Y | Extension lag (+) |
| Fukui et al. ( | PT | Hamstring tendons | 20 M | No extension lag |
Q quadriceps, P patella, PT patellar tendon, ST semitendinosus, FU follow-up, Y years, M months, ROM range of motion, MMT manual muscle test, MSTS musculoskeletal tumor society
Fig. 4Scheme of patellar osteotomy in this case series. Q quadriceps, PT patellar tendon, AS articular surface, # osteotomy line