2010
DOI: 10.1007/s11999-010-1454-x
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Late Complications and Survival of Endoprosthetic Reconstruction after Resection of Bone Tumors

Abstract: Mechanical complications were the most common cause of implant failure. Infection was the leading cause of both complication and amputation; risk of infection increased substantially with revision surgery. Modular implants had fewer mechanical complications, thus leading to fewer revisions and subsequent infections.

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Cited by 120 publications
(116 citation statements)
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“…Survival of the implants in our series was similar to previously reported experience. An implant survival at 10 years ranging from 58% to 77% for cemented megaprostheses [1,25,33,34] and from 58% to 70% for cementless megaprostheses was reported [16,17,31]. Eighty percent survival at 10 years was reported by Healey et al [21] in a study including only distal femur replacements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Survival of the implants in our series was similar to previously reported experience. An implant survival at 10 years ranging from 58% to 77% for cemented megaprostheses [1,25,33,34] and from 58% to 70% for cementless megaprostheses was reported [16,17,31]. Eighty percent survival at 10 years was reported by Healey et al [21] in a study including only distal femur replacements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Aseptic loosening (Type 2 failure) in megaprostheses was reported in the literature with a rate ranging from 2.4% to 15.4% for cemented stems [1,4,19,25,34] and from 0% to 8% for cementless implants [10,16,21,26,31] with evolving designs of the prosthesis allowing improvements in the last decades, like the introduction of a rotating hinge system at the knee [12,18,29]. Our series confirmed a low incidence of this type of failure, which occurred in six stems (3%) involving the distal femur in three patients and the proximal femur in three.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The risk of amputation due to infected tumor prostheses for oncological reconstructions has been reported to be between 23.5% and 87%. 70,[72][73][74][75][76] Management with two-stage revision remains the gold standard, 64,65,77,78 but a single-stage exchange of the prosthesis without removing the stems is possible in selected cases. 60 In two-stage procedures, the first stage includes debridement, insertion of culture-specific antibiotic-loaded bone cement in the form of beads and/or rods, temporary fixation with a custom-made IM nail or self-designed, mobile hinged-joint prosthesis covered with antibiotic-loaded PMMA.…”
Section: Custom-made Megaprosthesismentioning
confidence: 99%