Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases

Introduction: Safe surgical margins are difficult to achieve when performing surgical resections for bone and soft tissue tumours involving the pelvis. Even with the advancements in treatment modalities, the rates of cure for pelvic tumours are lower than those involving the long bones. We evaluat...

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Main Authors: Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff, Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham, Wan, Zulmi, Mat Zin, Nor Azman, Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain, Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril, Goh, Kian Liang
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/1/KOA_-_Surgical_Inaccuracy_in_Pelvic_Resection_%28Slides_for_Oral%29_-_Dr_Ariff.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/14/Conference_Korea_2013.pdf
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spelling iium-326022018-12-20T00:12:45Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/ Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham Wan, Zulmi Mat Zin, Nor Azman Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril Goh, Kian Liang RB Pathology RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer) RD701 Orthopedics Introduction: Safe surgical margins are difficult to achieve when performing surgical resections for bone and soft tissue tumours involving the pelvis. Even with the advancements in treatment modalities, the rates of cure for pelvic tumours are lower than those involving the long bones. We evaluated the accuracy of surgical margins achieved in pelvic tumour resections, its associated factors, as well as the oncologic outcomes. Materials and Methods: We reviewed 64 cases of pelvic tumours of various types, whom underwent internal (limb-salvage) or external hemipelvectomy in a single tumour referral centre between January 2001 and December 2010. Various clinicopathologic factors were analyzed in relation to achieving a negative microscopic margin in tumour resections. Survival time to local recurrence, distant metastasis, and disease-specific death of patients, as well as factors associated with the oncologic outcomes were analyzed. Results: Mean age at time of surgery was 39.84 years (range 8 to 79 years). Majority of cases were primary tumours (76.56%). The most common were chondrosarcoma (n=14) and osteosarcoma (n=13). Twenty-three patients underwent external hemipelvectomy and 41 patients subjected for internal hemipelvectomy of various types of resections. Majority (71.88%) of cases were treated with curative intention. Fourteen of 37 cases (37.84%) attempted for wide resection came back as having positive microscopic margins. Incidence of positive microscopic margin was higher in cases with wide contaminated margins (56.25%). Factors associated with positive microscopic margin include tumour occurrence, tumour volume, stage of tumour, types of surgery (amputation or limb-salvage) and types of pelvic resections. Local and distant recurrence rate were higher when margins were positive. But paradoxically the disease-specific death rate was lower in cases with positive margins. Conclusion: Factors that influence the oncologic outcomes include tumour volume, stage of tumour, types of surgery, histological diagnosis and grading. Microscopic margin was a prognostic factor for all three primary endpoints of this study, but was not statistically proven as an independent prognostic factor. The probability of achieving a clear microscopic margin in attempted wide resections was as low as 50% only, similar to a previous published experimental study. Internal hemipelvectomy provides significantly better disease-specific survival rate, hence justified with proper indication and selection of patients. 2013-10-17 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/1/KOA_-_Surgical_Inaccuracy_in_Pelvic_Resection_%28Slides_for_Oral%29_-_Dr_Ariff.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/14/Conference_Korea_2013.pdf Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff and Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham and Wan, Zulmi and Mat Zin, Nor Azman and Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain and Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril and Goh, Kian Liang (2013) Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases. In: 57th Annual Fall Congress of the Korean Orthopaedic Association (KOA), 17-19 Oct 2013, Grand Hilton Hotel, Seoul, Korea. http://www.koa.or.kr
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
English
topic RB Pathology
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RD701 Orthopedics
spellingShingle RB Pathology
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RD701 Orthopedics
Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham
Wan, Zulmi
Mat Zin, Nor Azman
Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Goh, Kian Liang
Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
description Introduction: Safe surgical margins are difficult to achieve when performing surgical resections for bone and soft tissue tumours involving the pelvis. Even with the advancements in treatment modalities, the rates of cure for pelvic tumours are lower than those involving the long bones. We evaluated the accuracy of surgical margins achieved in pelvic tumour resections, its associated factors, as well as the oncologic outcomes. Materials and Methods: We reviewed 64 cases of pelvic tumours of various types, whom underwent internal (limb-salvage) or external hemipelvectomy in a single tumour referral centre between January 2001 and December 2010. Various clinicopathologic factors were analyzed in relation to achieving a negative microscopic margin in tumour resections. Survival time to local recurrence, distant metastasis, and disease-specific death of patients, as well as factors associated with the oncologic outcomes were analyzed. Results: Mean age at time of surgery was 39.84 years (range 8 to 79 years). Majority of cases were primary tumours (76.56%). The most common were chondrosarcoma (n=14) and osteosarcoma (n=13). Twenty-three patients underwent external hemipelvectomy and 41 patients subjected for internal hemipelvectomy of various types of resections. Majority (71.88%) of cases were treated with curative intention. Fourteen of 37 cases (37.84%) attempted for wide resection came back as having positive microscopic margins. Incidence of positive microscopic margin was higher in cases with wide contaminated margins (56.25%). Factors associated with positive microscopic margin include tumour occurrence, tumour volume, stage of tumour, types of surgery (amputation or limb-salvage) and types of pelvic resections. Local and distant recurrence rate were higher when margins were positive. But paradoxically the disease-specific death rate was lower in cases with positive margins. Conclusion: Factors that influence the oncologic outcomes include tumour volume, stage of tumour, types of surgery, histological diagnosis and grading. Microscopic margin was a prognostic factor for all three primary endpoints of this study, but was not statistically proven as an independent prognostic factor. The probability of achieving a clear microscopic margin in attempted wide resections was as low as 50% only, similar to a previous published experimental study. Internal hemipelvectomy provides significantly better disease-specific survival rate, hence justified with proper indication and selection of patients.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham
Wan, Zulmi
Mat Zin, Nor Azman
Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Goh, Kian Liang
author_facet Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
Wan Ismail, Wan Mohd Faisham
Wan, Zulmi
Mat Zin, Nor Azman
Mohamed Amir, Nawaz Hussain
Mohamed Amin, Mohamed Azril
Goh, Kian Liang
author_sort Sharifudin, Mohd Ariff
title Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
title_short Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
title_full Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
title_fullStr Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
title_full_unstemmed Surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. A centre-base study of 64 cases
title_sort surgical inaccuracy of pelvic tumour resections and implication on the oncologic outcomes. a centre-base study of 64 cases
publishDate 2013
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/1/KOA_-_Surgical_Inaccuracy_in_Pelvic_Resection_%28Slides_for_Oral%29_-_Dr_Ariff.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/32602/14/Conference_Korea_2013.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T20:47:03Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T20:47:03Z
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