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Aims: The Birmingham Orthopaedic Oncology Meeting (BOOM), held in January 2024, convened 309 delegates from 53 countries to discuss and refine 21 consensus statements on the optimal management of chondrosarcoma. Methods: With representation from Europe (43%; n = 133), North America (17%; n = 53), South America (16%; n = 49), Asia (13%; n = 40), Australasia (5%; n = 16), the Middle East (4%; n = 12), and Africa (2%; n = 6), the combined experience of treating bone sarcomas among attendees totalled approximately 30,000 cases annually, equivalent to 66 years of experience in the UK alone. The meeting's process began with the formation of a local organizing committee, regional leads, and a scientific committee comprising representatives from 150 specialist units across 47 countries. Supported by major orthopaedic oncology organizations, the meeting used a modified Delphi process to develop consensus statements through online questionnaires, thematic groupings, narrative reviews, and anonymous pre-meeting polling. Results: Strong (> 80%) consensus was achieved on 19 out of 21 statements, reflecting agreement among delegates. Key areas of consensus included the role of radiology in diagnosis and surveillance, the management of locally recurrent disease, and the treatment of dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma. Notably, there was agreement that routine chemotherapy has no role in chondrosarcoma treatment, and radiological surveillance is safe for intraosseous chondrosarcomas. Despite the overall consensus, areas of controversy remain, particularly regarding the treatment of atypical cartilage tumours and surgical margins. These unresolved issues underscore the need for further research and collaboration within the orthopaedic oncology community. Conclusion: BOOM represents the largest global consensus meeting in orthopaedic oncology, providing valuable guidance for clinicians managing chondrosarcoma worldwide. The consensus statements offer a reference for clinical practice, highlight key research priorities, and aim to improve patient outcomes on a global scale.
Identifying consensus and areas for future research in chondrosarcoma : a report from the Birmingham Orthopaedic Oncology Meeting
Jeys, Lee M;Morris, Guy V;Kurisunkal, Vineet J;Botello, Eduardo;Boyle, Richard A;Ebeid, Walid;Houdek, Matthew T;Puri, Ajay;Ruggieri, Pietro;Brennan, Bernadette;Laitinen, Minna K;Abad Repiso, Santiago;Abdelbary, Hesham;Abiad Mejia, Alejandro;Abood, Ahmed A;Abril Martin, Juan C;Abudu, Adesegun;Abu Elhamd, Ayman;Acosta, Marthelena;Ae, Keisuke;Agarwal, Manish;Ajit Singh, Vivek;Akiyama, Toru;Alshaygy, Ibrahim;Albergo, Jose I;Alexander, John;Alfaro, Patricio A;Alpan, Bugra;Amaya-Valero, Jose;Anderson, Megan;Andreou, Dimosthenis;Annabell, Lucas;Anthony, Christopher;Aoude, Ahmed;Arteagoitia-Colino, Iraia;Asavamongkolkul, Apichat;Aston, William;Asua Mentxaka, Libe;Azzopardi, Christine;Baad-Hansen, Thomas;Badr, Ismail T;Baixauli-Garcia, Francisco;Baker, Gavin;Balach, Tessa;Baldi, Giacomo G;Barry, Janie;Basile, Georges;Bastoni, Stefano;Basuki, Mohammad;Bauer, Henrik;Bayliss, Lee;Becker, Ricardo G;Bedi, Angad;Benevenia, Joseph;Bengoa, Francisco;Bergh, Peter;Bergovec, Marko;Bernthal, Nicholas;Binitie, Odion;Boddie, David;Boffano, Michele;Bonilla Huertas, Patricia;Borgognoni, Anna B;Botchu, Rajesh;Bramer, Jos;Brar, Rahat;Branford-White, Harriet;Broekhuis, Demien;Broida, Samuel E;Budny, Tymoteusz;Burke, Zachary D;Cabrolier, Jorge;Calvo-Haro, Jose A;Calvo Tapies, Jorge R;Cardoso, Rodrigo;Carey Smith, Richard;Carvallo, Pedro I;Casales Fresenga, Nicolas;Casanova, Jose M;Ceballos, Oscar;Cebrian Parra, Juan L;Chacon Cartaya, Sara;Chan, Chung M;Cho, Yoon J;Choong, Peter;Chung, Yang-Guk;Ciechanowicz, Dawid;Clara-Altamirano, Miguel A;Clever, David;Colina, Sebastian M;Consuegra, Luis;Couch, Cory;Cribb, Gillian;Cuervo, Carlos;Cusick, Laurence A;Dadia, Solomon;Dagher, Tanios;Dammerer, Dietmar;Davies, Mark;Davies, Nerys;de la Rosa Martino, Luis P;de Santos de la Fuente, Francisco J;Fuente de Vaal, Marieke;Deckers, Claudia;Delgado Obando, Javier;Deo, Shaneel;Deventer, Niklas;Di Bella, Claudia;Domson, Gregory;Donati, Davide M;Dorleijn, Desiree M;Du Toit, Jacques;Dunne, Debra;Duran Ciarrochi, Rodolfo;Ekman, Elina;El Ghoneimy, Ahmed M;Endo, Makoto;Eralp, Levent;Etaiwi, Mahmoud;Evans, Scott;Evrard, Robin;Eward, Will;Farese, Alberto;Ferguson, Peter C;Ferreira Cardoso, Pedro F;Fiorenza, Fabrice;Flint, Michael;Flores, Hector;Freitas, Joao;Fuchs, Bruno;Fujiwara, Tomohiro;Funovics, Philipp T;Galli Serra, Marcos;Gamie, Zakareya;Garces-Zarzalejo, Carlos;Gazendam, Aaron;Gebert, Carsten;Gerbers, Jasper G;Gerrand, Craig;Abou-Nouar, Ghaith;Ghert, Michelle;Ghosh, Kanishka M;Gibbons, Max;Gomez-Mier, Luis C;Gomez-Vallejo, Jesus;Gomez-Mascard, Anne;Gonzalez, Marcos R;Gonzalez-Lizan, Fausto;Gosheger, Georg;Goudie, Stuart;Goulding, Krista;Goumenos, Stavros D;Griffin, Anthony;Gulia, Ashish;Gupta, Sanjay;Gupta, Amit;Guzman, Maurice;Haitham, Mohammed;Hardes, Jendrik;Hardoy, Francisco;Hasan, Yusuf;Hauer, Georg;Havard, Helard;Haydon, Rex;Healey, John;Hernandez Gonzalez, Nerea;Hernandez-Lopez, Adriana;Hesla, Asle;Hess, Matthew;Hilton, Thomas;Hongsaprabhas, Chindanai;Hornicek, Francis;Hosking, Keith;Houghton, Eleanor;Idowu, Oluwaseyi K;Ippolito, Joseph;Isler, Marc;Iwata, Shintaro;Jagiello, Jake;Jenkins, Neil;Jenkins, Thomas;Jeys, Charlotte;Jeys, Tom;Johnson, Luke;Johnston, Andy;Joo, Min W;Jutte, Paul C;Kaldas, Kadri;Kamat, Amar;Kannan, Sudhir;Kapanci, Bilal;Khan, Zeeshan;Kobayashi, Hiroshi;Kollender, Yehuda;Koob, Sebastian;Kotrych, Daniel;Kyte, Richard;Lamo de Espinosa, Jose M;Lazarides, Alexander L;Le Nail, Louis-Romee;Legosz, Pawel;Lehner, Burkhard;Leithner, Andreas;Lejoly, Maryse;Lewis, Valerae O;Lin, Peng;Linares, Francisco;Lozano-Calderon, Santiago A;Mahendra, Ashish;Mahyudin, Ferdiansyah;Mandia Mancebo, Fermin J;Torrejon, Sara M;Marx, Christian;Mascard, Eric;Mattei, Jean-Camille;McCullough, Louise;McMahon, Sam;Medellin Rincon, Manuel R;Miller, Benjamin;Miwa, Shinji;Molina Uribe, Gustavo;Moon, Bryan;Morgan-Jones, Rhidian;Moriel Garcesco, Diego J;Morris, Carol;Morrison, Steward;Mottard, Sophie;Moura, Marcio;Muster, Linde;Nakayama, Robert;Narhari, Prashant;Navas, Ana;Nayak, Prakash;Neugebauer, Johannes;Newman, Erik T;Nieminen, Jyrki;Nyqvist, Emmy;Nystrom, Lukas;O'Reilly-Harbidge, Sarah;O'Toole, Gary;Oliveira, Vania;Olivier, André;Omar, Mohamed;Ortiz-Cruz, Eduardo J;Ozger, Harzem;Ozkan, Korhan;Pala, Elisa;Palmerini, Emanuela;Pang, Grant;Papagelopoulos, Panayiotis;Paraliticci, Giovanni;Parry, Michael C;Patton, Sam;Peake, David;Peiro Ibanez, Ana;Perez Munoz, Israel;Perianayagam, Ganapathy R;Petersen, Michael M;Ploegmakers, Joris;Pollock, Robin;Powell, Gerard;Pretell, Juan;Puetzler, Jan;Qamar, Faisal;Raja, Anand;Rajasekaran, Raja B;Ramkumar, Dipak;Randall, R L;Rankin, Kenneth S;Raskin, Kevin A;Rassppan, Kumaran;Repsa, Lauris;Ropars, Mickael;Rose, Peter;Sadek, Wael;Salcedo, German;Saleemi, Aasim;Sambri, Andrea;Sar, Hartej;Scanferla, Roberto;Schubert, Thomas;Schwarze, Jan;Scoccianti, Guido;Scrimshire, Ashley;Sekita, Tetsuya;Shehadeh, Ahmad;Shoaib, Ahmed;Shreemal, Bhim;Shumelinsky, Felix;Siegel, Geoffrey;Silveri, Claudio;Silverwood, Robert;Sinnaeve, Friedl;Sison, Jerome;Slade, Andrea;Smolle, Maria A;Snyman, Franz;Sommerville, Scott;Sood, Sahil;Spiguel, Andre;St-Yves, Hugo;Staals, Eric L;Stacchiotti, Silvia;Stavropoulos, Nikolas;Steadman, Peter;Stevenson, Jonathan D;Sullivan, Mikaela;Sys, Gwen;Szostakowski, Bartlomiej;Tamburini, Angela;Taniguchi, Yuta;Temple, Thomas;Theil, Christoph;Thorkildsen, Joachim;Tibbo, Meagan;Tillman, Roger;Toda, Yu;Tootsi, Kaspar;Torner Rubies, Ferran;Traub, Frank;Trikoupis, Ioannis;Tsagkozis, Panagiotis;Tsoi, Kim;Tsuchiya, Hiroyuki;Vainio, Veli-Matti;Valcarcel, Antonio;Valencia, Juan;Van Beeck, Annelies;Van de Sande, Michel;Van Den Berghe, Thomas;Van de Geest, Ingrid;Van der Heijden, Lizz;Van der Wal, Robert;Van Langevelde, Kirsten;Vaz, Gualter;Velez Villa, Roberto;Verspoor, Floortje;Verstraete, Koenraad;Visgauss, Julia;Vyrva, Oleg;Wafa, Hazem;Walter, Sebastian;Wan Ismail, Wan F;Wang, Edward;Wang, Patrick Q;Warnock, David;Werier, Joel;Weschenfelder, Wolfram;Wong, Kwok-Chuen;Woulthuyzen-Bakker, Marjan;Wunder, Jay;Wysinghe, Indica;Yamamoto, Norio;Ye, Zhaoming;Yoon, Seung-Jae;Zainul Abidin, Suraya;Zamora, Tomas;Zecchetto, Pierluca;Zhang, Liuzhe;Zumarraga, Juan P;Campanacci, Domenico A
2025
Abstract
Aims: The Birmingham Orthopaedic Oncology Meeting (BOOM), held in January 2024, convened 309 delegates from 53 countries to discuss and refine 21 consensus statements on the optimal management of chondrosarcoma. Methods: With representation from Europe (43%; n = 133), North America (17%; n = 53), South America (16%; n = 49), Asia (13%; n = 40), Australasia (5%; n = 16), the Middle East (4%; n = 12), and Africa (2%; n = 6), the combined experience of treating bone sarcomas among attendees totalled approximately 30,000 cases annually, equivalent to 66 years of experience in the UK alone. The meeting's process began with the formation of a local organizing committee, regional leads, and a scientific committee comprising representatives from 150 specialist units across 47 countries. Supported by major orthopaedic oncology organizations, the meeting used a modified Delphi process to develop consensus statements through online questionnaires, thematic groupings, narrative reviews, and anonymous pre-meeting polling. Results: Strong (> 80%) consensus was achieved on 19 out of 21 statements, reflecting agreement among delegates. Key areas of consensus included the role of radiology in diagnosis and surveillance, the management of locally recurrent disease, and the treatment of dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma. Notably, there was agreement that routine chemotherapy has no role in chondrosarcoma treatment, and radiological surveillance is safe for intraosseous chondrosarcomas. Despite the overall consensus, areas of controversy remain, particularly regarding the treatment of atypical cartilage tumours and surgical margins. These unresolved issues underscore the need for further research and collaboration within the orthopaedic oncology community. Conclusion: BOOM represents the largest global consensus meeting in orthopaedic oncology, providing valuable guidance for clinicians managing chondrosarcoma worldwide. The consensus statements offer a reference for clinical practice, highlight key research priorities, and aim to improve patient outcomes on a global scale.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3546633
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simulazione ASN
Il report seguente simula gli indicatori relativi alla propria produzione scientifica in relazione alle soglie ASN 2023-2025 del proprio SC/SSD. Si ricorda che il superamento dei valori soglia (almeno 2 su 3) è requisito necessario ma non sufficiente al conseguimento dell'abilitazione. La simulazione si basa sui dati IRIS e sugli indicatori bibliometrici alla data indicata e non tiene conto di eventuali periodi di congedo obbligatorio, che in sede di domanda ASN danno diritto a incrementi percentuali dei valori. La simulazione può differire dall'esito di un’eventuale domanda ASN sia per errori di catalogazione e/o dati mancanti in IRIS, sia per la variabilità dei dati bibliometrici nel tempo. Si consideri che Anvur calcola i valori degli indicatori all'ultima data utile per la presentazione delle domande.
La presente simulazione è stata realizzata sulla base delle specifiche raccolte sul tavolo ER del Focus Group IRIS coordinato dall’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia e delle regole riportate nel DM 589/2018 e allegata Tabella A. Cineca, l’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia e il Focus Group IRIS non si assumono alcuna responsabilità in merito all’uso che il diretto interessato o terzi faranno della simulazione. Si specifica inoltre che la simulazione contiene calcoli effettuati con dati e algoritmi di pubblico dominio e deve quindi essere considerata come un mero ausilio al calcolo svolgibile manualmente o con strumenti equivalenti.