Abstract

There has been an increasing interest and enormous applications in three-dimensional (3D) printing technology and its prosthesis, driving many orthopaedic surgeons to solve the difficult problem of bony defects and explore new ways in surgery approach. However, the most urgent problem is without an effective prosthesis and standard treatment strategy. In order to resolve these problems, this study was performed to explore the use of a 3D-printed anatomically conforming pelvic prosthesis for bony defect reconstruction following tumor resection and to describe a detailed treatment flowchart and the selection of a surgical approach. Six patients aged 48-69 years who had undergone pelvic tumor resection underwent reconstruction using 3D-printed anatomically conforming pelvic prostheses according to individualized bony defects between March 2016 and June 2018. According to the Enneking and Dunham classification, two patients with region I+II tumor involvement underwent reconstruction using the pubic tubercle-anterior superior iliac spine approach and the lateral auxiliary approach and one patient with region II+III and three patients with region I+II+III tumor involvement underwent reconstruction using the pubic tubercle-posterior superior iliac spine approach. The diagnoses were chondrosarcoma and massive osteolysis. After a mean follow-up duration of 30.33 ± 9.89 months (range, 18-42), all patients were alive, without evidence of local recurrence or distant metastases. The average blood loss and blood transfusion volumes during surgery were 2500.00 ± 1461.51 ml (range, 1200-5000) and 2220.00 ± 1277.62 ml (range, 800-4080), respectively. During follow-up, the mean visual analogue scale (VAS) score decreased, and the mean Harris hip score increased. There were no signs of hip dislocation, prosthetic loosening, delayed wound healing, or periprosthetic infection. This preliminary study suggests the clinical effectiveness of 3D-printed anatomically conforming pelvic prostheses to reconstruct bony defects and provide anatomical support for pelvic organs. A new surgical approach that can be used to expose and facilitate the installation of 3D-printed prostheses and a new treatment strategy are presented. Further studies with a longer follow-up duration and larger sample size are needed to confirm these encouraging results.

Highlights

  • The pelvis is a very important component of the skeletal system that helps stabilize and protect the organs in the pelvis

  • The many shortcomings associated with allografts or autografts, such as malalignment, malrotation, nonunion, rejection, infection, and refracture, significantly limit the application of this technique [3,4,5,6]

  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan showed that the tumor had heterogeneous intensity on T1 and T2 images in five cases, MRI signal intensity of the bone marrow disappeared and had a long T1 and long T2 signal intensity changes in one case, and the radionuclide concentration of tumor foci could be seen on electrical capacitance tomography (ECT) images

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Summary

Introduction

The pelvis is a very important component of the skeletal system that helps stabilize and protect the organs in the pelvis. As the three-dimensional (3D) geometry of the pelvic bone is complex, reconstruction of pelvic bony defects following the resection of large pelvic bone tumors poses a great challenge to orthopaedic surgeons worldwide. Surgeons have used massive allografts or autografts in their attempts to reconstruct these bony defects [1, 2]. The many shortcomings associated with allografts or autografts, such as malalignment, malrotation, nonunion, rejection, infection, and refracture, significantly limit the application of this technique [3,4,5,6]. With developments in implantation techniques, prosthetic reconstruction after tumor resection has gradually been adopted by many scholars [7,8,9,10,11]. Several kinds of prosthesis can be used for reconstruction, such as a saddle endoprosthesis, [10, 12] an ice cream cone endoprosthesis [8, 13], and a modular hemipelvic endoprosthesis

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