Burden of complications after giant cell tumor surgery. A single-center retrospective study of 192 cases - 12/06/22
Abstract |
Background |
Surgical complications are frequent with giant cell tumor of bone; recurrence is the best known and most widely studies; other causes of failure have been less well investigated. We therefore performed a retrospective study to identify and assess the main reasons for surgical revision.
Hypothesis |
Recurrence is the main cause of surgical revision in giant cell tumor of bone, but other complications, such as mechanical issues or infection, are underestimated.
Patients and methods |
A single-center retrospective study included 192 patients (included from 2000 to 2016) undergoing first giant cell tumor of bone surgery in a bone tumor reference center. Surgery consisted in curettage for 152 patients (79%) and resection for 40 (21%). The 3 main reconstruction techniques were filling (136 patients; 71%), prosthesis (18 patients; 9%), and fusion (14 patients: 7%). Filling used cement in 9 cases (7%) and bone graft in 127 (93%). Cumulative incidence functions were calculated.
Results |
There were 171 revision procedures in 92 patients: 43 for mechanical reasons, 30 for infection, 86 for tumor recurrence, 12 for other causes. Cumulative incidence of revision at 10years was 36% (95% CI: 27–44) for recurrence, 26% (95% CI: 17–36) for mechanical causes, and 13% (95% CI: 9–19) for infection, for overall cumulative incidence of revision of 61% (95% CI: 50–69).
Discussion |
Risk of all-cause surgical revision in giant cell tumor of bone was 61% at 10years, with recurrence accounting for only half of cases.
Level of evidence |
IV.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Giant cell tumor of bone, Bone tumor, Tumor recurrence, Bone curettage
Plan
Vol 108 - N° 4
Article 103047- juin 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.