| Literature DB >> 30200979 |
Minxun Lu1, Jie Wang1, Cong Xiao1,2, Fan Tang1, Li Min1, Yong Zhou1, Wenli Zhang1, Chongqi Tu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Uncemented endoprosthetic knee replacement has become a mainstream treatment for malignant tumours of the distal femur. Most femoral stems, however, are straight and therefore poorly fit the anteriorly bowed curvature of the femur. To address this issue, we used a short, curved, uncemented press-fit femoral stem and evaluated its short-term outcomes after reconstruction of the distal femur.Entities:
Keywords: Curvature; Distal femur; Short; Stem; Uncemented
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200979 PMCID: PMC6131732 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-018-1486-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1Design specification and schematic cross sections of the curved femoral stem
Fig. 2The flexible reamer we used
Fig. 3A case of reconstruction of the distal femur following distal resection of 73% of the length of the femur. a Postero-anterior radiograph of the entire femur. b, c Postero-anterior and lateral radiographic views of the region of stem insertion of the femur. d, e Postero-anterior and lateral T-SMART views of the stem insertion region of the femur
Fig. 4A case of reconstruction of the distal femur following a distal resection of 54% of the length of the femur. a Postero-anterior radiograph of the entire femur. b, c Postero-anterior and lateral radiographic views of the region of stem insertion of the femur. d, e Postero-anterior and lateral T-SMART views of the stem insertion region of the femur
Fig. 5A case of reconstruction of the distal femur following a distal resection of 26% of the length of the femur. a Postero-anterior radiograph of the entire femur. b, c Postero-anterior and lateral radiographic views of the region of stem insertion of the femur. d, e Postero-anterior and lateral T-SMART views of the stem insertion region of the femur
Oncology outcomes and complications related to the percentage of bone resection
| Group | Number of patients | Age, years | Primary/revision | Length of resection, mm | Percentage of bone resection, % | Radius of retained femur, mm | Oncology outcome | Amputation | Complications | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loosening, % | Breakage, % | Infection | |||||||||
| < 40% resection | 23 | 33.8 (range, 14–67) | 16/7 | 118.7 (range, 61.1–164.2) | 29.8 (range, 15–39) | 1470 (range, 1230–1620) | 0% | 4.3% (1/23) | 0 | 0 | 8.7% (2/23) |
| 40 to 60% resection | 14 | 22.5 (range, 10–62) | 14/0 | 188.7 (range, 160.5–223.9) | 49.2 (range, 41–58) | 1210 (range, 1010–1430) | Local recurrence 7.1% (1/14) | 0% | 0 | 0 | 7.1% (1/14) |
| > 60% resection | 3 | 26.3 (range, 14–50) | 3/0 | 301.3 (range, 294.0–313.7) | 73.4 (range, 69–78) | 1050 (range, 820–1170) | 0% | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0% |
| All | 40 | 29.3 (range, 10–67) | 33/7 | 157.9 (range, 61.1–313.7) | 40.2 (range, 15–78) | 1347.5 (range, 820–1620) | 2.5% (1/40) | 2.5% (1/40) | 0 | 0 | 7.5% (3/40) |
Oncology outcomes and complications related to the type of implant fixation
| Type of implant | Number of patients | Age/years | Oncology outcome | Amputation | Complications | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loosening, % | Breakage, % | Infection | |||||
| Primary | 33 | 29.0 (range, 10–67) | Local recurrence 3% (1/33) | 3% (1/33) | 0 | 0 | 9.1% (3/33) |
| Revision | 7 | 30.7 (range, 21–45) | 0% | 0% | 0 | 0 | 0% |
| All | 40 | 29.3 (range, 10–67) | 2.5% (1/40) | 2.5% (1/40) | 0 | 0 | 7.5% (3/40) |
Bone-implant interface evaluation related to the percentage of bone resection
| Group | Number of patients | Length of retained femur, mm | Axial length of press-fit area, mm | Percentage of press-fit length in stem length, % | Vertical distance of radiolucent area | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior/posterior | Medial/lateral | |||||||||
| Distal endpoint, mm | Midpoint, mm | Proximal endpoint, mm | Distal endpoint, mm | Midpoint, mm | Proximal endpoint, mm | |||||
| < 40% resection | 23 | 279.8 (range, 237.7–353.6) | 92.3 (range, 80.7–136.6) | 91.8 (range, 80.1–97.5) | 0.52/0.61 | 0.92/0.75 | 1.12/0.90 | 0.21/0.17 | 0.45/0.34 | 1.02/0.83 |
| 40 to 60% resection | 14 | 195.0 (range, 150.4–246.4) | 57.0 (range, 21.7–87.1) | 57.0 (range, 21.7–87.1) | 0.78/0.84 | 1.08/1.03 | 1.55/2.1 | 0.35/0.18 | 0.64/0.45 | 1.24/0.94 |
| > 60% resection | 3 | 110.0 (range, 83.2–131.4) | 20.5 (range, 15.8–24.3) | 20.5 (range, 15.8–24.3) | 0.63/0.3 | 2/2.2 | N/A | 0/0 | 2.1/2.3 | N/A |
| All | 40 | 236.3 (range, 83.2–353.6) | 74.0 (range,15.8–136.6) | 74.3 (range, 15.8–97.5) | 0.61/0.65 | 1.03/0.92 | 1.26/1.28 | 0.24/0.16 | 0.98/0.53 | 1.09/0.86 |
N/A not applicable
Fig. 6A typical case of bone ingrowth is shown
Previous studies for distal femur reconstruction
| Time span | Prosthesis type | Major fixation type | Number of patients* | Loosening, % | Implant fracture, % | 5-year survival, % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unwin et al. [ | 1968–1992 | Custom-Stanmore | Cemented | 493 | 9.9 | 3 | N/A |
| Myers et al. [ | 1973–2000 | Custom-Stanmore | Cemented | 335 | N/A | 2 | N/A |
| Schwartz et al. [ | 1980–2008 | Custom or modular | Cemented | 186 | 11.8 | 5.3 | 87.7 |
| Frink et al. [ | 1983–1999 | Stryker | Cemented | 74 | 9.4 | 2.7 | N/A |
| Jeys et al. [ | 1986–1996 | Custom | Cemented | 228 | 13.6 | 2.2 | N/A |
| Griffin et al. [ | 1989–2000 | KMFTR | Uncemented | 74 | 2.7 | 5.4 | N/A |
| Wunder et al. [ | 1986–1995 | KMFTR | Uncemented | 50 | 2 | 8 | 90 |
| Song et al. [ | 1988–2008 | KMFTR | Uncemented | 117 | 5.9 | 3.4 | 74 |
| Batta et al. [ | 1994–2006 | Custom | Uncemented | 69 | 13 | 10 | 72.7 |
| Bus et al. [ | 1995–2010 | MUTARS | Uncemented | 89 | 17 | N/A | N/A |
| Pala et al. [ | 2003–2010 | GMRS | Uncemented | 187 | 5.3 | 0 | N/A |
| O’Donnell et al. [ | 2005–2012 | GMRS | Uncemented | 35 | 0 | 0 | N/A |
| Current study | 2015–2017 | Curved stem | Uncemented | 42 | 0 | 0 | N/A |
GMRS Global Modular Replacement System, KMFTR Kotz Modular Femur and Tibia Reconstruction System, MUTARS Modular Universal Tumour and Revision System, N/A not applicable
*Number of patients who underwent distal femoral replacement
Design features of common commercially available uncemented stems for distal femur reconstruction
| Implant | GMRS | MUTARS | Megasystem-C | Segmental system | Current study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alloy | TiAl6V4 | TiAl6V4 | TiAl6V4 | CoCrMo | TiAl6V4 | |
| Design | Global | Straight | Curved | Straight | Straight/curved | Partially Curved |
| Proximal | Four fins | – | Fluted | Trabecular metal collar | Straight with two fins | |
| Middle | – | – | Fluted | Fluted | – | |
| Distal | Tapered | Cylindrical | Fluted | Fluted | Tapered | |
| Radius of curvature, mm | – | – | – | – | 1400 | |
| Diameter, mm | 8–17 | 12–18 | 12–24 | 9–19 | 10–18 | |
| Length, mm | 105–325 | 120/160/200 | 100/130/160 | 130/190 | 100/110/120 | |
| Surface | Proximal | HA-coated/porous-coated | HA-coated | Porous-coated | – | HA-coated |
| Middle | Porous-coated | HA-coated | Porous-coated | – | HA-coated | |
| Distal | – | Polished | Porous-coated | – | Polished |
GMRS Global Modular Replacement System, MUTARS Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System, HA hydroxyapatite