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Review
. 2006 Feb;6(2):239-48.
doi: 10.1586/14737140.6.2.239.

Surgical options and outcomes in bone sarcoma

Affiliations
Review

Surgical options and outcomes in bone sarcoma

Hazem Wafa et al. Expert Rev Anticancer Ther. 2006 Feb.

Abstract

Bone sarcomas are challenging to treat. The primary goal of treatment is local control of the disease while, if possible, achieving salvage of the limb and its function. There is no ideal method of reconstruction in limb-salvage surgery but the choice of the method of reconstruction should be individualized based upon many factors including the patient's age, the extent and location of the tumor, the wishes of the patient, and the availability of surgical facilities and expertise, as well as the cost of the procedure. In this review, the authors explore the advantages and disadvantages of the different methods of limb reconstruction. The surgical management of bone sarcomas is a real challenge to the orthopedic surgeon, owing to the diversity of sites in which tumors arise, combined with the extension of the tumor into adjacent soft tissues and their proximity, in many cases, to major neurovascular structures. There have been dramatic improvements in survival for patients with osteosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma in the past 30 years owing to increasing effectiveness of chemotherapy. This, along with developments in imaging techniques (magnetic resonance imaging in particular) has led to earlier diagnosis and more accurate preoperative staging. Whilst traditional treatment for bone tumors used to be amputation, advances in surgical techniques have made limb-salvage procedures a valid alternative method of treatment to amputation in 80-85% of patients with primary bone sarcomas.

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