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Limb salvage surgery for children and adolescents with malignant bone tumors in a developing country

Authors :
Peter Noun
Samar Muwakitt
Fadi S. Farhat
Roula Farah
Samir Akel
Bassem I. Razzouk
Rami Kamzoul
Said Sagghieh
Carlos Rodriguez Galindo
Hassan Khalifeh
Miguel R. Abboud
Rachid Haidar
Ghina R. Mumtaz
Bhaskar N. Rao
Source :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer. 51:787-791
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Wiley, 2008.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe the 5-year experience of a multidisciplinary limb salvage program for children and adolescents with malignant bone tumors in Lebanon. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between January 2002 to February 2007, 30 children and adolescents (2 with Ewing sarcoma and 28 with osteosarcoma) underwent Limb Salvage Surgeries (LSS) at the American University of Beirut Medical Center after partnering with the multidisciplinary team at St. Judes Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH). Procedures performed included 12 Repiphysis, noninvasively expandable, prostheses inserted in skeletally immature children, 15 modular prostheses, 2 allografts and 1 rotationplasty. All patients received pre- and postoperative chemotherapy. RESULTS: With a mean follow-up of 31 months, 20 patients are now off therapy, 4 died, and 6 are receiving chemotherapy (3 due to pulmonary recurrence). Complications of surgery included infections in three cases, failure of the expansion mechanism in two, femoral stem fracture in one, prostheses femoral stem loosening in one and wound dehiscence in one. Lengthening of Repiphysis prostheses was achieved by subjecting the limb to an electromagnetic field that would allow controlled release of the Repiphysis expansion mechanism. Ten patients underwent a total of 42 lengthening procedures with an average of 9 mm lengthened per procedure (range 2-15 mm). All patients have good function of the affected limb. CONCLUSION: Our LSS results are comparable to those reported in the literature. Collaboration with SJCRH and fund raising were critical to the program's success. This endeavor could serve as a model for establishing LSS programs in developing countries.

Details

ISSN :
15455017 and 15455009
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....74946e62cf6ca55665c5c06b1278805b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.21696