Surgical and Oncologic Outcome following Sacrectomy for Primary Malignant Bone Tumors and Locally Recurrent Rectal Cancer

被引:0
作者
Weidlich, Anne [1 ]
Schaser, Klaus-Dieter [1 ]
Weitz, Juergen [2 ]
Kirchberg, Johanna [2 ]
Fritzmann, Johannes [2 ]
Reeps, Christian [2 ]
Schwabe, Philipp [3 ]
Melcher, Ingo [3 ]
Disch, Alexander [1 ]
Dragu, Adrian [1 ]
Winkler, Doreen [1 ]
Mehnert, Elisabeth [1 ]
Fritzsche, Hagen [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Carl Gustav Carus Dresden, Univ Ctr Orthoped Trauma Surg & Plast Surg, Sarcoma Ctr, Natl Ctr Tumor Dis NCT UCC, D-01307 Dresden, Germany
[2] Univ Hosp Carl Gustav Carus Dresden, Dept Visceral Thorac & Vasc Surg, Div Vasc & Endovasc Surg, Sarcoma Ctr,Natl Ctr Tumor Dis NCT UCC, D-01307 Dresden, Germany
[3] Vivantes Hosp Spandau, Ctr Musculoskeletal Tumor Med, Dept Trauma & Orthoped Surg, D-13585 Berlin, Germany
关键词
sacrectomy; navigation; primary malignant tumor; chordoma; sarcoma; sacrum; colorectal carcinoma; rectal cancer; surgical margins; oncologic outcome; COMPUTER-ASSISTED NAVIGATION; EN-BLOC SACRECTOMY; SACRAL CHORDOMA; RECONSTRUCTION TECHNIQUES; PELVIC EXENTERATION; RESECTION; SURGERY; MANAGEMENT; REDUCE; MARGIN;
D O I
10.3390/cancers16132334
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Simple Summary Sacrectomy represents a radical indication for bone sarcomas (e.g., osteosarcoma or chondrosarcoma) and chordomas, as well as selected carcinomas with invasion of the sacrum. Extralesional en bloc excision is surgically demanding and associated with resection-induced neurologic deficits and risks. Due to the low incidence of bone sarcomas, the rare localization in the sacrum and the complexity of the surgical procedure, studies reporting on the oncological outcome and corresponding complications in larger patient numbers are rare. The aim was to describe the oncosurgical management and the complication profile and to analyze our own treatment results after partial/total sacrectomy, with attention paid to a possible benefit by using intraoperative 3D navigation. There was a significant difference in progression-free and metastasis-free survival between sarcoma, chordoma and carcinoma patients. Complications were common, but no independently influencing causative factors could be identified. Although there was a subjective impression of improved intraoperative 3D orientation and easier identification of resection planes, the use of navigation did not significantly influence resection status or oncological patient outcome.Abstract Introduction: Bone sarcoma or direct pelvic carcinoma invasion of the sacrum represent indications for partial or total sacrectomy. The aim was to describe the oncosurgical management and complication profile and to analyze our own outcome results following sacrectomy. Methods: In a retrospective analysis, 27 patients (n = 8/10/9 sarcoma/chordoma/locally recurrent rectal cancer (LRRC)) were included. There was total sacrectomy in 9 (incl. combined L5 en bloc spondylectomy in 2), partial in 10 and hemisacrectomy in 8 patients. In 12 patients, resection was navigation-assisted. For reconstruction, an omentoplasty, VRAM-flap or spinopelvic fixation was performed in 20, 10 and 13 patients, respectively. Results: With a median follow-up (FU) of 15 months, the FU rate was 93%. R0-resection was seen in 81.5% (no significant difference using navigation), and 81.5% of patients suffered from one or more minor-to-moderate complications (especially wound-healing disorders/infection). The median overall survival was 70 months. Local recurrence occurred in 20%, while 44% developed metastases and five patients died of disease. Conclusions: Resection of sacral tumors is challenging and associated with a high complication profile. Interdisciplinary cooperation with visceral/vascular and plastic surgery is essential. In chordoma patients, systemic tumor control is favorable compared to LRRC and sarcomas. Navigation offers gain in intraoperative orientation, even if there currently seems to be no oncological benefit. Complete surgical resection offers long-term survival to patients undergoing sacrectomy for a variety of complex diseases.
引用
收藏
页数:23
相关论文
共 77 条
  • [1] Can Navigation-assisted Surgery Help Achieve Negative Margins in Resection of Pelvic and Sacral Tumors?
    Abraham, John A.
    Kenneally, Barry
    Amer, Kamil
    Geller, David S.
    [J]. CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH, 2018, 476 (03) : 499 - 508
  • [2] Computer-Assisted Navigation During an Anterior-Posterior En Bloc Resection of a Sacral Tumor
    Al Eissa, Sami
    Al-Habib, Amro F.
    Jahangiri, Faisal R.
    [J]. CUREUS, 2015, 7 (11):
  • [3] Does Intraoperative Navigation Assistance Improve Bone Tumor Resection and Allograft Reconstruction Results?
    Aponte-Tinao, Luis
    Ritacco, Lucas E.
    Ayerza, Miguel A.
    Muscolo, D. Luis
    Albergo, Jose I.
    Farfall, German L.
    [J]. CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH, 2015, 473 (03) : 796 - 804
  • [4] Flap reconstruction for sacrectomy defects: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Asaad, Malke
    Rajesh, Aashish
    Wahood, Waseem
    Vyas, Krishna S.
    Houdek, Matthew T.
    Rose, Peter S.
    Moran, Steven L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PLASTIC RECONSTRUCTIVE AND AESTHETIC SURGERY, 2020, 73 (02) : 255 - 268
  • [5] Surgical techniques for spinopelvic reconstruction following total sacrectomy: a systematic review
    Bederman, S. Samuel
    Shah, Kalpit N.
    Hassan, Jeffrey M.
    Hoang, Bang H.
    Kiester, P. Douglas
    Bhatia, Nitin N.
    [J]. EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL, 2014, 23 (02) : 305 - 319
  • [6] Can Navigation Improve the Ability to Achieve Tumor-free Margins in Pelvic and Sacral Primary Bone Sarcoma Resections? A Historically Controlled Study
    Bosma, Sarah E.
    Cleven, Arjen H. G.
    Dijkstra, P. D. Sander
    [J]. CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH, 2019, 477 (07) : 1548 - 1559
  • [7] Surgery for locally recurrent rectal cancer
    Boyle, KM
    Sagar, PM
    Chalmers, AG
    Sebag-Montefiore, D
    Cairns, A
    Eardley, I
    [J]. DISEASES OF THE COLON & RECTUM, 2005, 48 (05) : 929 - 937
  • [8] Analysis of morbidity and mortality in patients with primary bone tumors who underwent sacrectomy: A systematic review
    Branco e Silva, Mayara
    Martins, Samilly Conceicao Maia
    Garofo, Karen Voltan
    Hanasilo, Carlos Eduardo Hideo
    Etchebehere, Mauricio
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BONE ONCOLOGY, 2022, 35
  • [9] The outcomes of navigation-assisted bone tumour surgery MINIMUM THREE-YEAR FOLLOW-UP
    Cho, H. S.
    Oh, J. H.
    Han, I.
    Kim, H-S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-BRITISH VOLUME, 2012, 94B (10): : 1414 - 1420
  • [10] Posterior-Only Approach for En Bloc Sacrectomy: Clinical Outcomes in 36 Consecutive Patients
    Clarke, Michelle J.
    Dasenbrock, Hormuzdiyar
    Bydon, Ali
    Sciubba, Daniel M.
    McGirt, Matthew J.
    Hsieh, Patrick C.
    Yassari, Reza
    Gokaslan, Ziya L.
    Wolinsky, Jean-Paul
    [J]. NEUROSURGERY, 2012, 71 (02) : 357 - 364