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Journal ArticleDOI

Intramedullary nailing for treatment of pathologic femoral fractures due to metastases

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TLDR
Intramedullary nailing should be indicated for pathologic fractures at femoral diaphysis and metaphysis when cancer is in an advanced stage, and enables pain relief, early postoperative mobilisation and weight-bearing, thus improving the quality of life of cancer patients.
Abstract
Pathologic fractures of the femur because of bone metastases seriously affect the quality of life of cancer patients. Different surgical options are indicated to achieve a durable and solid fixation, depending on several clinical, prognostic and mechanical factors. Locked intramedullary nailing is currently used to treat pathologic femoral fractures in patients with multiple metastases when the trochanteric region or shaft is mainly involved. This study evaluates intramedullary nailing for treatment of patients with pathologic femoral fractures, focussing on complications, clinical and functional outcomes and survival rates. The series included 80 pathologic fractures treated with a titanium alloy Proximal Nail (Standard or Antirotation) or Lateral Anterograde Femoral Nail (PFN, PFNA or LAFN, Synthes) inserted in a locked static mode. Acrylic cement was used to fill the bone cavity after nail insertion in eight patients; percutaneous cementoplasty was simultaneously performed in 11 cases of severe ipsilateral acetabular osteolysis. Postoperative outcomes focussed on pain relief, postoperative mobility and quality of life and they were analysed retrospectively using QOL-ACD and ECOG. Eleven patients (13.75%) suffered from non-fatal DVT post-surgery, with no pulmonary embolism. Six patients (7.5%) developed superficial wound infections and two patients (2.5%) developed pnaeumonia. There was no loss of reduction, breakage, screw pull out, or hardware or implant failure that required component substitution or revision. Lung histotype and the contemporary presence of cerebral and visceral metastases appeared to be predisposing factors in reducing survival time. All patients attained satisfactory pain relief, early deambulation and a marked clinical improvement during the first 6-10 postoperative months, with gradual worsening thereafter from deterioration of their general condition due to cancer progression. The patients' survival rate was 40% at 1 year, 25% at 2 years and 15% at 3 years. Results confirm that multiple factors related to patients and primary cancer may affect survival rate after femoral fracture. Intramedullary nailing should be indicated for pathologic fractures at femoral diaphysis and metaphysis when cancer is in an advanced stage. This procedure offers good and durable stability, and enables pain relief, early postoperative mobilisation and weight-bearing, thus improving the quality of life of cancer patients.

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Bone metastases of unknown origin: epidemiology and principles of management

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the relevant literature in an attempt to investigate the epidemiology of the histological primaries finally identified in patients with bone metastases from occult cancer, and a strategy of management and treatment of bone metastase from occult carcinomas is suggested.
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Treatment of pathological fractures of the long bones.

TL;DR: Treatment of pathological fractures of the long bones: Adjuvant cement should be considered in large lesions for better stabilisation and the role of post-operative radiotherapy remains unclear.
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Impending fracture: A difficult diagnosis

TL;DR: This work has shown that a consistent tool to evaluate impending fractures would be of great value to guide the treatment of metastatic bone disease.
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Metastatic fractures of long limb bones.

TL;DR: Investigations must be performed to establish the diagnosis of pathological fracture then to determine that the bone lesion is a metastasis, and the type of tumour, availability of effective adjuvant treatments, and general health of the patient are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oncological and functional results after surgical treatment of bone metastases at the proximal femur

Grzegorz Guzik
- 25 Jan 2018 - 
TL;DR: Results of surgical treatment for metastases to the proximal femur are particularly good in patients after standard or modular endoprosthetic replacement, and the author considers this treatment method to be optimal in patients with good prognosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Metastatic disease in long bones. A proposed scoring system for diagnosing impending pathologic fractures.

TL;DR: A weighted scoring system is proposed to quantify the risk of sustaining a pathologic fracture through a metastatic lesion in a long bone and it is suggested that all metastatic lesions in long bones be evaluated prior to irradiation.
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Survival after surgery for spinal and extremity metastases : prognostication in 241 patients

TL;DR: A prognostication model stratified the patients into 3 groups with a 1-year survival ranging from 0.5 to 0.0.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prognostic factors and a scoring system for patients with skeletal metastasis

TL;DR: A multivariable analysis of the patients was conducted using the Cox proportional hazards model and identified five significant prognostic factors for survival, namely, the site of the primary lesion, the performance status, the presence of visceral or cerebral metastases, any previous chemotherapy, and multiple skeletal metastases.
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