| Literature DB >> 27034614 |
Ahmed Hamed Kassem Abdelaal1, Norio Yamamoto2, Katsuhiro Hayashi2, Akihiko Takeuchi2, Shinji Miwa2, Hiroyuki Tsuchiya2.
Abstract
Limb salvage surgery has become the standard treatment for malignant primary bone tumors in the extremities. Limb salvage represents a challenge in skeletally immature patients. Several treatment options are available for limb reconstruction after tumor resection in children. We report our results using the technique of epiphyseal sparing and reconstruction with frozen autograft bone in 18 children. The mean follow-up period for the all patients included in this study is 72 ± 26 m. Eight patients remained disease-free, seven patients lived with no evidence of disease, two were alive but with disease, and one patient died of the disease. Five- and ten-year rates of survival were 94.4%. Graft survival at 5 and 10 years was 94.4%. Functional outcome using the Enneking scale was excellent in 17 patients (94.4%) and poor in one patient (5.5%). Complications include 2 nonunions, 2 fractures, 2 deep infections, 1 soft tissue recurrence, and leg length discrepancy in 7 cases. This technique is a good reconstructive choice in a child with a nonosteolytic primary or secondary bone tumor, responsive to chemotherapy, without involvement of the articular cartilage. It is a straight forward, effective, and biological technique, which affords immediate mobilization of joints and possible cryoimmune effects, with excellent long term functional outcome and less complication.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27034614 PMCID: PMC4807044 DOI: 10.1155/2015/892141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Descriptive criteria of all cases.
| Number | Age | Sex | Diagnosis | Location | Outcome | Freezing | Margin | Histological response | Function | FU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 11 | M | Osteosarcoma | Femur | CDF | Free freezing | Marginal | RH III/IV | Excellent | 70 |
| 2 | 10 | M | Osteosarcoma | Femur | CDF | Free freezing | Marginal | RH III/IV | Excellent | 66 |
| 3 | 16 | M | Osteosarcoma | Femur | CDF | Free freezing | Marginal | RH IV/IV | Excellent | 63 |
| 4 | 6 | F | Osteosarcoma | Femur | CDF | Free freezing | marginal | RH III/IV | Excellent | 54 |
| 5 | 13 | F | Osteosarcoma | Femur | CDF | Free freezing | Marginal | RH III/IV | Excellent | 53 |
| 6 | 16 | M | Undifferentiated round cell sarcoma | Calcaneus | CDF | Pedicle freezing | Wide | Total necrosis RH IV/IV | Excellent | 53 |
| 7 | 11 | F | Osteosarcoma | Tibia | CDF | Free freezing | Marginal | RH III/IV | Excellent | 95 |
| 8 | 12 | F | Osteosarcoma | Tibia | CDF | Pedicle freezing | Marginal | Total necrosis RH IV/IV | Excellent | 87 |
| 9 | 16 | F | Osteosarcoma | Tibia | NED | Free freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | Excellent | 155 |
| 10 | 8 | F | Osteosarcoma | Femur | NED | Free freezing | Wide | RH IV/IV | Excellent | 90 |
| 11 | 13 | F | osteosarcoma | femur | NED | pedicle freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | excellent | 79 |
| 12 | 14 | M | osteosarcoma | tibia | NED | pedicle freezing | Marginal | a few viable tumor cells | excellent | 85 |
| 13 | 15 | M | osteosarcoma | femur | NED | free freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | excellent | 69 |
| 14 | 15 | M | osteosarcoma | tibia | NED | pedicle freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | excellent | 54 |
| 15 | 10 | F | Osteosarcoma | tibia | NED | pedicle freezing | Marginal | RH III/IV | excellent | 50 |
| 16 | 6 | M | osteosarcoma | femur | AWD | free freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | poor | 58 |
| 17 | 18 | F | osteosarcoma | tibia | AWD | pedicle freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | excellent | 98 |
| 18 | 11 | M | Ewing's sarcoma | tibia | DOD | free freezing | Wide | RH III/IV | excellent | 32 |
The following abbreviations were used; CDF: continuous disease free. NED: no evidence of disease. AWD: alive with the disease. DOD: died of the disease. FU: follow up. (∗): refers to cases who had a hemicortical resection.
RH: Rosen and Huvos Grade [15].
Grade I, little or no effect of chemotherapy noted; Grade II, a partial response to chemotherapy with greater than 50% tumor necrosis noted and attributable to preoperative chemotherapy; however, some histologic sections demonstrated areas of viable tumor; Grade III, greater then 90% tumor necrosis attributable to preoperative chemotherapy; however, foci of what appear to be viable tumor are seen in some histologic sections; and Grade IV, no viable-appearing tumor cells noted in any of the histologic sections.
Figure 1Illustration showing different methods and technique of freezing. (a) Free freezing (intercalary) in distal femur. There are two osteotomies and the tumor bearing bone is totally immersed in liquid nitrogen with no anatomical continuity with the host bone. (b) Pedicle freezing (intercalary) in the tibia. Also this figure shows the joint preservation technique through performing the osteotomy in subchondral bone. (c) Free freezing (hemicortical) in the tibia. The osteotomy line surrounds the lesion and the tumor bearing bone is freely frozen, while there is an anatomical continuity in the host bone proximal and distal to the tumor.
Figure 2Survival curves. (a) Kaplan-Meier survival curve showing the five- and ten-year overall survival. (b) Kaplan-Meier survival curve showing the graft five and ten-year survival.
Figure 3Case presentation representing a ten-year-old boy at time of surgery with osteosarcoma distal right femur. (a, b) Anteroposterior and lateral view of distal femur XR showing the tumor mass. (c) T2 weighed MRI image of the distal femur showing the tumor mass with high signal intensity. (d) Intraoperative XR showing the freely resected segment to be frozen and the host bone. (e) Intraoperative photo of free freezing. (f) The tumor bearing bone after freezing. (g) The frozen segment after repositioning and fixation. (h) Postoperative XR of the distal femur after freezing and fixation. (i) Long length film showing a LLD of 3 cm.
Summary of different limb reconstruction methods used in children.
| Item of classification | Our Study | Reconstruction by expandable prosthesis [ | Resurfaced allograft- prosthetic composite [ | Epiphyseal preservation and allograft reconstruction [ | Extracorporeal irradiation [ | Stanmore noninvasive extendible endoprosthesis [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 18 | 38 | 19 | 35 | 101 | 55 |
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| Mean follow-up (months) | 72.8 | 113 | 78 | 108 | 52.8 (median) | 41.2 |
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| Recurrence | 5.5% | 0% | 9% | 4.9% | 0% | |
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| Infection | 11.1% | 47% | Deep 5% | 5.7% | 5.9% | 10.9% |
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| Fracture | 11.1% | 15.7% | 32% | 31.4% | — | 5.4% |
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| Amputation | 5.5% | 8.5% | 5.2% | 3.9% | 1.8% | |
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| Other complications | Nonunion | Aseptic loosening | Nonunion | Nonunion | Distant recurrence 19.8% | Persistent foot drop 3.6% |
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| Overall survival | 94.4% | 55% | 84% | 86% | (80.8%~85.7%) | 81.8% |
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| Mean LLD | 22 mm | 37 mm | 19 mm | |||
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| Overall complication rate | 33.3% | 58% | 54% | 35.4% | 29.1% | |
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| Functional outcome | Excellent in 94.4% | Excellent and good in 71% | In 13 patients, excellent and good in 62% and fair in 38% | Will be reported later | Mean MSTS score 24.7 | |