Abstract

Surgical treatment of benign and low-grade malignant intramedullary chondroid lesions at the distal femur is not well analyzed compared to higher-grade chondrosarcomas. Localization at the distal femur offers high biomechanical risks requiring sophisticated treatment strategy, but scientific guidelines are missing. We therefore wanted to analyze a series of equally treated patients with intralesional resection and bone cement filling with and without additional osteosynthesis. Twenty-two consecutive patients could be included with intralesional excision and filling with polymethylmethacrylate bone cement alone (n = 10) or with compound bone cement osteosynthesis using a locking compression plate (n = 12). Clinical and radiological outcome was retrospectively evaluated including tumor recurrences, complications, satisfaction, pain, and function. Mean follow-up was 55 months (range 7–159 months). Complication rate was generally high with lesion-associated fractures both in the osteosynthesis group (n = 2) and in the non-osteosynthesis group (n = 2). All fractures occurred in lesions that reached the diaphysis. No fractures were found in meta-epiphyseal lesions. No tumor recurrence was found until final follow-up. Clinical outcome was good to excellent for both groups, but patients with additional osteosynthesis had significantly longer surgery time, more blood loss, longer postoperative stay in the hospital, more complications, more pain, less satisfaction, and worse functional outcome. Intralesional resection strategy was oncologically safe without local recurrences but revealed high risk of biomechanical complications if the lesion reached the diaphysis with an equal fracture rate no matter whether osteosynthesis was used or not. Additional osteosynthesis significantly worsened final clinical outcome and had more overall complications. This study may help guide surgeons to avoid overtreatment with additional osteosynthesis after curettage and bone cement filling of intramedullary lesions of the distal femur. Meta-epiphyseal lesions will need additional osteosynthesis rarely, contrary to diaphyseal lesions with considerable cortical thinning.

Highlights

  • Benign and low-grade malignant intramedullary chondroid tumors belong to the most common primary bone tumors mainly divided into enchondromas and atypical cartilaginous tumors (ACT/chondrosarcoma grade I according to older nomenclature) [1]

  • Compound bone cement osteosynthesis with a locking compression plate was performed in n = 12 cases due to expected higher instability, whereas n = 10 cases did not receive additional osteosynthesis as sufficient stability was expected with bone cement filling alone

  • Patients treated with additional osteosynthesis, presented significantly worse values for overall satisfaction with the treatment, overall pain, and function

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Summary

Introduction

Benign and low-grade malignant intramedullary chondroid tumors belong to the most common primary bone tumors mainly divided into enchondromas and atypical cartilaginous tumors (ACT/chondrosarcoma grade I according to older nomenclature) [1]. Radiological and histological differences between aggressive large enchondromas and low-grade malignant ACT are hard to distinguish [4]. The risk of transformation of ACT and large enchondromas into malignant higher-grade chondrosarcomas is evident [1, 5, 6]. Painful, and radiologically aggressive with endosteal scalloping or soft tissue extension often receive surgery, to avoid further growth or transformation into higher-grade chondrosarcomas. Intralesional excision with vigorous curettage and additional filling with polymethylmethacrylate bone cement has been proven as the therapy of choice, whereas segmental resection with arthroplasty or other complex surgical reconstruction seems too aggressive with avoidable functional impairment [2, 5, 9,10,11,12]. Whereas metastases are rare [5, 13,14,15,16,17], local recurrences are frequent [2, 18,19,20] as well as instability of the femur and impairment of adjacent joint function [12, 21,22,23]

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