骨科肿瘤整形手术的失败模式:成像结果和失败率回顾。

IF 2.8 4区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY Current oncology Pub Date : 2024-10-17 DOI:10.3390/curroncol31100465
Anuj Shah, Fabiano N Cardoso, Felipe Souza, Julien Montreuil, Juan Pretell-Mazzini, H Thomas Temple, Francis Hornicek, Brooke Crawford, Ty K Subhawong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

利用内假体和同种异体移植进行的肢体挽救手术适用于多种肿瘤疾病。这些重建手术可能因多种原因而失败并需要翻修,概括起来可分为机械性失败(软组织失败、无菌性松动、结构性失败)、非机械性失败(感染、肿瘤进展)和儿科失败(趾骨停滞、生长发育不良)。不同的放射学和临床发现定义了特定的失败亚型,但在放射学文献中却鲜有说明。具体来说,了解失败模式的组织结构可以指导放射科医生寻找重建后的并发症,提高对其预后意义的认识,并通过标准化语言和结果概念框架促进研究。本综述的目的是结合风险因素、失败率、预后和存活率统计以及化疗、放疗和翻修手术的临床决策,强调骨科肿瘤重建手术中每种失败模式的关键放射学发现和影像学研究。
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Failure Modes in Orthopedic Oncologic Reconstructive Surgery: A Review of Imaging Findings and Failure Rates.

Limb salvage surgeries utilizing endoprostheses and allografts are performed for a variety of oncologic conditions. These reconstructions can fail and require revision for many reasons, which are outlined and classified into mechanical failures (soft tissue failures, aseptic loosening, structural failure), non-mechanical failures (infection, tumor progression), and pediatric failures (physeal arrest, growth dysplasia). Distinct radiologic and clinical findings define specific failure subtypes but are sparsely illustrated in the radiology literature. Specifically, an understanding of the organizational structure of the failure modes can direct radiologists' search for post-reconstruction complications, enhance an appreciation of their prognostic significance, and facilitate research by standardizing the language and conceptual framework around outcomes. The purpose of this review is to highlight the key radiologic findings and imaging studies of each failure mode in orthopedic oncologic reconstructive surgery in the context of risk factors, failure rates, prognosis and survival statistics, and clinical decision-making regarding chemotherapy, radiation, and revision surgery.

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来源期刊
Current oncology
Current oncology ONCOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
664
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Current Oncology is a peer-reviewed, Canadian-based and internationally respected journal. Current Oncology represents a multidisciplinary medium encompassing health care workers in the field of cancer therapy in Canada to report upon and to review progress in the management of this disease. We encourage submissions from all fields of cancer medicine, including radiation oncology, surgical oncology, medical oncology, pediatric oncology, pathology, and cancer rehabilitation and survivorship. Articles published in the journal typically contain information that is relevant directly to clinical oncology practice, and have clear potential for application to the current or future practice of cancer medicine.
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