Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System Prostheses in Patients with Bone Cancer of the Lower Limbs: A Narrative Review of Functional Outcomes
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Functional Outcomes
4.2. Surgical Outcomes
4.3. Oncological Outcomes
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors | Type of Study | Patients | Bone Tumor Lower Extremity | Model of Prosthesis | Outcome Measures | Timing | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pala et al. (2021) [10]. | Retrospective; multicentric. | n: 187; M/F: 100/87; Mean age (range): 53 years (4–89). | n: 107 Malignant bone tumors or soft tissue tumors with bone involvement; n: 52 Metastatic; n. 13 Lymphomas/Myelomas; n. 8 Giant cell tumors; n. 7 Non-oncologic. | MUTARS; Upper/Lower limbs: 72/115; Regarding Lower limbs: n: 56 Cemented; n: 59 Non-cemented; n: 65 Silver-coated. | Oncological outcomes: n: 143 Surgical complications (Henderson et al.); n: 139 MSTS. | 2000–2019; Mean oncologic follow-up: 3.4 years (range: 1 month–16 years). | MSTS after surgery: Average score: 25.1 (9–30); n: 115 (excellent); n: 20 (good); n: 4 (fair); n: 0 (poor). |
Bus et al. (2015) [11]. | Retrospective. | n: 101; M/F: 55/46; Mean age (range): 36 years (13–82). | n: 56 Osteosarcoma; n: 10 Leiomyosarcoma; n: 9 Chondrosarcoma; n: 9 Giant cell tumors; n: 7 Pleomorphic undifferentiated sarcoma; n: 5 Ewing sarcoma; n: 2 Low-grade Osteosarcoma; n: 2 Sarcoma not otherwise specified; n: 1 Synovial sarcoma; n: 1 Diffuse-type giant cell tumor. | MUTARS; Knee; Cemented/Non-cemented: 23/78; Hydroxyapatite-coated: 42. | Oncological outcomes: n: 63 Surgical complications (Henderson et al.). | 1995–2010; Median follow-up: 8.9 years (range: 8.0–9.7). | Absence of rehabilitation outcomes. |
Kamiński et al. (2017) [12]. | Prospective cohort study. | n: 34; M/F: 12/44; Mean age (range): 72 years (45–85). | n: 13 Metastasis; n: 21 cases: Non-oncological prosthesis revision. | MUTARS; Hip; Cemented: 34. | HHS; M-HHS; VAS. | Dec. 2008 to Jan 2016; Follow up on the first postoperative day and at 3, 6, and 12 months. | There is an absence of statistically significant differences between groups in HHS, m-HHS, and VAS after surgery, although similar improvements in both groups. |
Gosheger et al. (2006) [13]. | Retrospective. | n: 250; M/F: 135/115; Mean age (range): 30.7 years (7.4–80). | n: 139 Osteosarcoma; n: 43 Chondrosarcoma; n: 36 Ewing sarcoma; n: 15 Pleomorphic sarcoma; n: 6 Parosteal osteosarcoma; n: 3 Leiomyosarcoma; n: 4 Soft tissue sarcoma with bone involvement; n: 4 Giant cell tumor. | MUTARS; Upper/Lower limbs: 51/199; Regarding Lower limbs: n: 58 Cemented; n: 141 Non-cemented; Since 1997, all HA-coated; All cemented prostheses contain gentamicin. | MSTS. | 1992–2003; Mean follow-up: 45 months (range: 3–140 months). | Average MSTS (lower limb): 25, after proximal tibia replacement (range 13–30); 24, after distal femoral replacement (range 8–30); 21, after proximal femoral (range 14–29); 20, after total femoral replacements (range 13–27). Average MSTS (upper limb): 23, after distal humerus replacement (range 18–27); 21, after humerus replacements (range 1–25); 19 after total humerus replacements (range 18–20). |
Hardes et al. (2018) [14]. | Retrospective. | n: 98; Median age (range): 18 years (10–78). | n: 63 Osteosarcoma; n: 16 Ewing sarcoma; n: 6 Pleomorphic sarcoma; n: 6 Giant cell tumor; n: 5 Chondrosarcoma; n: 1 Leiomyosarcoma; n: 1 Parosteal osteosarcoma. | MUTARS; Knee; n: 9 Tibia component (cemented) and hybrid-fixated femur component (cementless stem with cemented shield); Silver-coated: 56. | Oncological outcomes: Surgical complications (Henderson et al.); Knee extension in patients after surgery: n: 51 No deficit; n: 11 5°–10° Deficit; n: 6 > 10° Deficit. Knee flexion in patients after surgery: n: 55 ≥ 90°; n: 9 89°–80°; n: 4 40°–70°. | 1996–2014; Mean oncological follow-up: 45 months (range: 3–140 months). | Absence of rehabilitation outcomes; There were no statistically significant associations between an active extension deficit and patella alta. In contrast, patella baja was associated with a noticeable reduction in patients with flexion > 90°. |
Hardes et al. (2013) [15]. | Retrospective. | n: 59; M/F: 36/23; Mean age (range): 33 years(11–74). | n: 34 Osteosarcoma; n: 7 Chondrosarcoma; n: 7 Synovial sarcoma; n: 7 Pleomorphic sarcoma; n: 3 Leiomyosarcoma; n: 1 Giant cell tumor of the patella. | MUTARS; Knee (distal femur, proximal tibia); n: 14 Femur component (cemented); Silver-coated: 33. | Oncological outcomes: Surgical complications (classified as major and minor); n: 46 MSTS; n: 21 OKS; n: 38 ROM of the knee. | 1992–2011; Mean follow-up: 62 months (12 to 211). | Mean MSTS (range): 22 (10 to 29); Mean OKS (range): 32 (10 to 48); Mean range of flexion (range): 72° (10° to 100°). A total of 25 of these had flexion of ≥ 90°, and only one had gross limitation of movement with flexion of 20° after peri-prosthetic infection and revision. An orthosis and/or a walking aid were used by 12 patients. |
Guzik (2016) [16]. | Retrospective. | n: 64; M/F: 38/26; Mean age in F: 66 years; Mean age in M: 69 years; In total, 64% of patients had pathological fractures and were unable to walk. | n: 64 Metastatic lytic tumors. | n: 36 MUTARS; Hip (proximal femur); n: 28 GMRS; Cemented/Non-cemented: 19/45. | MSTS; VAS; HHS; KPS. | 2010–2014; Mean follow-up (range): 1.8 (3.6 to 1.2) years. | Six weeks after surgery: Mean MSTS: 20 (18–21); Mean VAS: 3.8 (2–5); Mean HHS: 75 (71–81); Mean KPS: 64 (50–80). Twelve weeks after surgery: Mean MSTS: 21 (18–22); Mean VAS: 3.4 (2–5); Mean HHS: 81 (71–86); Mean KPS: 65 (50–80). Walking: n: 15 patients could ambulate efficiently without crutches; n: 39 patients could use one crutch or a walking cane when walking over longer distances; n: 10 patients could walk with two crutches; Muscle strength of the operated limb: Lower in all patients; Use of stairs: n: 37 patients had an alternating gait; n: 27 patients led with the healthy limb and followed with the affected limb. |
Pellegrino et al. (2020) [17]. | Observational case–control study. | n: 26 in the oncological group (case); M/F: 13/13; Mean age ± SD (range): 40.9 ± 18.9 (range: 15–75). VS n: 21 in the osteoarthritis group (control); M/F: 8/13; Mean age ± SD (range): 68.0 ± 4.7 (range: 56–74). | n: 12 Osteosarcoma; n: 5 Chondrosarcoma; n: 4 Giant cell tumor; n: 2 Undifferentiated sarcomas; n: 2 Leiomyosarcomas; n: 1 Primitive bone lymphoma. | Oncological group: n: 10 GMRS; n: 9 LINK®; n: 7 MUTARS. VS Osteoarthritis group: TKA with a posterior stabilized, ultra-congruent, or cruciate retaining implant. | Gait analysis (basography, knee ROM, electromyographic activity of some group of muscles during the gait cycle); ROM of the knee; MSTS (only oncological group) SF-36. | Oncological group: 2006–2016 (minimum follow-up of 12 months); Osteoarthritis group: 2010–2014 (minimum follow-up of 12 months). | Gait analysis: Mean speed (m/s ± SD): Oncological/osteoarthritis: 0.83 ± 0.22/0.76 ± 0.21; Cadence (stride/min ± SD): Oncological/osteoarthritis: 47.8 ± 5.4/45.3 ± 6.6; No statistically significant differences were detected between surgical approaches in the oncological group; ROM of the knee: There was a statistically significant difference between the healthy and the operated limbs in both groups. However, no significant difference was registered between the limb with megaprosthesis and the limb with a standard implant. Mean MSTS (% ± SD): 79.2 ± 3.9 SF-36 (subscale): The mean value was higher in the oncological group in terms of bodily pain, vitality, social functioning, and mental health; The mean value was higher in the osteoarthritis group regarding general health. |
Ferrara et al. (2019) [18]. | Observational. | n: 21; M/F: 7/14; Mean age ± SD: 61.76 ± 14.68. | n: 15 Metastatic bone tumor; n: 6 Osteosarcoma. | MUTARS; 71.4% proximal femur; 23.8% distal femur; 4.8% both. | ROM; VAS; SPPB; ECOG; KPS; MSTS; TESS; Stabilometry. | February 2017–December 2018; Follow-up at one week, one month, three months, six months, and one year. | Significant improvement: VAS at T1 hip ROM, MSTS, and TESS at T2; SPPB at T3; No significant results in stabilometry. |
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Ferrara, P.E.; Ariani, M.; Codazza, S.; Aprovitola, A.; Polisano, D.; Ronconi, G. Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System Prostheses in Patients with Bone Cancer of the Lower Limbs: A Narrative Review of Functional Outcomes. Cancers 2024, 16, 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16193357
Ferrara PE, Ariani M, Codazza S, Aprovitola A, Polisano D, Ronconi G. Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System Prostheses in Patients with Bone Cancer of the Lower Limbs: A Narrative Review of Functional Outcomes. Cancers. 2024; 16(19):3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16193357
Chicago/Turabian StyleFerrara, Paola E., Mariantonietta Ariani, Sefora Codazza, Adelaide Aprovitola, Daniele Polisano, and Gianpaolo Ronconi. 2024. "Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System Prostheses in Patients with Bone Cancer of the Lower Limbs: A Narrative Review of Functional Outcomes" Cancers 16, no. 19: 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16193357
APA StyleFerrara, P. E., Ariani, M., Codazza, S., Aprovitola, A., Polisano, D., & Ronconi, G. (2024). Modular Universal Tumor and Revision System Prostheses in Patients with Bone Cancer of the Lower Limbs: A Narrative Review of Functional Outcomes. Cancers, 16(19), 3357. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16193357