info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Is navigation-guided en bloc resection advantageous compared with intralesional curettage for locally aggressive bone tumors?
Fecha
2018-02Registro en:
Farfalli, Germán Luis; Albergo, Jose I.; Piuzzi, Nicolas Santiago; Ayerza, Miguel A.; Muscolo, D. Luis; et al.; Is navigation-guided en bloc resection advantageous compared with intralesional curettage for locally aggressive bone tumors?; Springer; Clinical Orthopaedics And Related Research.; 476; 3; 2-2018; 511-517
0009-921X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Farfalli, Germán Luis
Albergo, Jose I.
Piuzzi, Nicolas Santiago
Ayerza, Miguel A.
Muscolo, D. Luis
Ritacco, Lucas
Aponte Tinao, Luis A.
Resumen
Background: The treatment of locally aggressive bone tumors is a balance between achieving local tumor control and surgical morbidity.Wide resection decreases the likelihood of local recurrence, although wide resection may result in more complications than would happen after curettage.Navigationassisted surgery may allow more precise resection, perhaps making it possible to expand the procedures indications and decrease the likelihood of recurrence; however, to our knowledge, comparative studies have not been performed. Questions/purposes The purpose of this study was to compare curettage plus phenol as a local adjuvant with navigation-guided en bloc resection in terms of (1) local recurrence; (2) nononcologic complications; and (3) function as measured by revised Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS) scores. Methods Patients with a metaphyseal and/or epiphyseal locally aggressive primary bone tumor treated by curettage and adjuvant therapy or en bloc resection assisted by navigation between 2010 and 2014were considered for this retrospective study. Patients with a histologic diagnosis of a primary aggressive benign bone tumor or low-grade chondrosarcoma were included. During this time period, we treated 45 patients with curettage of whom 43 (95%)were available for followup at a minimum of 24 months (mean, 37 months; range, 24-61 months), andwe treated 26 patientswith navigation-guided en bloc resection, of whom all (100%) were available for study. During this period, we generally performed curettage with phenol when the lesionwas in contactwith subchondral bone. We treated tumors that were at least 5 mm from the subchondral bone, such that en bloc resection was considered possible with computer-Assisted block resection. There were no differences in terms of age, gender, tumor type, or tumor location between the groups. Outcomes, including allograft healing, nonunion, tumor recurrence, fracture, hardware failure, infection, and revised MSTS score, were recorded. Bone consolidation was defined as complete periosteal and endosteal bridging visible between the allograft-host junctions in at least two different radiographic views and the absence of pain and instability in the union site. All study data were obtained from our longitudinally maintained oncology database. Results In the curettage group, two patients developed a local recurrence, and no local recurrences were recorded in patients treated with en bloc resection. All patients who underwent navigation-guided resection achieved tumorfree margins. Intraoperative navigation was performed successfully in all patients and there were no failures in registration. Postoperative complications did not differ between the groups: in patients undergoing curettage, 7%(three of 43) and in patients undergoing navigation, 4% (one of 26) had a complication. There was no difference in functional scores: mean MSTS score for patients undergoing curettage was 28 points (range, 2730 points) and for patients undergoing navigation, 29 (range, 27-30 points; p = 0.10). Conclusions In this small comparative series, navigationassisted resection techniques allowed conservative en bloc resection of locally aggressive primary bone tumors with no local recurrence. Nevertheless, with the numbers available, we saw no difference between the groups in terms of local recurrence risk, complications, or function. Until or unless studies demonstrate an advantage to navigation-guided en bloc resection, we cannot recommend wide use of this novel technique because it adds surgical time and expense. Level of Evidence Level III, therapeutic study.