The choices of treatment for patients with extensive tumors of the femur include total femur megaprosthesis or large allograft-prosthetic composites. Previous reports suggest variable survival ranging from 60-70% at 1 to 2 years. However, these studies described earlier prostheses and techniques. Questions/purposes: To confirm previous reports we determined (1) risk of local recurrence; (2) overall survivorship; and (3) function in patients with total femur reconstructions for tumors. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 23 patients with total femur megaprostheses implanted between 1987 and 2006 after resection of bone tumors. Two patients lost at followup were excluded; the remaining 21 included 15 males and six females with a mean age of 21 years. The mean followup was 48 months (range, 1 month 17 years). Function was assessed according to the MSTS System II. Results: No patient developed a local recurrence during followup. At last followup, six patients were continuously disease-free at a mean of 148 months, one patient had no evidence of disease after treatment of a recurrence, one patient was alive with disease, and 13 patients died of their disease at a mean time of 17 months. In 15 patients evaluated with the MSTS score, the mean score was 66%; four patients had over 75%, eight from 51% to 75%, three from 26% to 50%. Four patients (19%) had complications requiring further surgery in absence of trauma. A fifth patient had a posttraumatic periprosthetic fracture. Conclusions: A total femur prosthesis allows a limb-preserving procedure in tumors with extensive femoral involvement or in the presence of a skip lesion along the femur. The prognosis of these tumors is poor, but this reconstruction provides function with a relatively low rate of major complications. © 2010 The Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons®.

Local recurrence, survival and function after total femur resection and megaprosthetic reconstruction for bone sarcomas.

RUGGIERI, PIETRO;Pala E;
2010

Abstract

The choices of treatment for patients with extensive tumors of the femur include total femur megaprosthesis or large allograft-prosthetic composites. Previous reports suggest variable survival ranging from 60-70% at 1 to 2 years. However, these studies described earlier prostheses and techniques. Questions/purposes: To confirm previous reports we determined (1) risk of local recurrence; (2) overall survivorship; and (3) function in patients with total femur reconstructions for tumors. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 23 patients with total femur megaprostheses implanted between 1987 and 2006 after resection of bone tumors. Two patients lost at followup were excluded; the remaining 21 included 15 males and six females with a mean age of 21 years. The mean followup was 48 months (range, 1 month 17 years). Function was assessed according to the MSTS System II. Results: No patient developed a local recurrence during followup. At last followup, six patients were continuously disease-free at a mean of 148 months, one patient had no evidence of disease after treatment of a recurrence, one patient was alive with disease, and 13 patients died of their disease at a mean time of 17 months. In 15 patients evaluated with the MSTS score, the mean score was 66%; four patients had over 75%, eight from 51% to 75%, three from 26% to 50%. Four patients (19%) had complications requiring further surgery in absence of trauma. A fifth patient had a posttraumatic periprosthetic fracture. Conclusions: A total femur prosthesis allows a limb-preserving procedure in tumors with extensive femoral involvement or in the presence of a skip lesion along the femur. The prognosis of these tumors is poor, but this reconstruction provides function with a relatively low rate of major complications. © 2010 The Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons®.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3164556
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