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Patient survival after resection of skeletal metastases and endoprosthetic reconstruction: a nation-wide cohort study in a single oncological institution Cover

Patient survival after resection of skeletal metastases and endoprosthetic reconstruction: a nation-wide cohort study in a single oncological institution

Open Access
|Mar 2025

Abstract

Background

The aim of this nation-wide 2009-2021 cohort study was to analyze postoperative survival of patients with resected appendicular skeletal metastases and endoprosthetic reconstruction in comparison to sarcoma patients and non-oncological reconstructions.

Patients and methods

A single institution nation-wide cohort of 144 consecutive patients with tumor endoprosthetic reconstructions (32 resected metastases, 73 resected sarcomas, 39 non-oncological) were stratified into histopathological groups according to the 2013-SPRING prediction model. Their survival was analyzed with the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox regression.

Results

The observed patient survival rates after wide resection of fast/moderate/slow growing metastases were 25/55/88% at 2 years and 10/30/83% at 5 years, while in sarcomas the observed survival rates were 80% at 2 years and 69% at 5 years. Estimated mean postoperative survival after resection of skeletal metastases was significantly shorter in comparison to sarcomas (4.6 years vs. 9.1 years, log-rank p < 0.001). Predictors of worse patient survival included higher age, pathologic fracture or >1 metastasis, diagnostic group fast-growing metastases and higher preoperative C-reactive protein (CRP).

Conclusions

Wide resection and endoprosthetic reconstruction offer a reliable solution in selected patients with skeletal metastases. Higher age, fast-growing metastases (from bladder cancer, colorectal, hepatocellular, lung cancer, malignant melanoma, unknown origin), pathologic fracture or >1 metastasis and elevated CRP predict shorter patient survival and may represent a relative contraindication in this regard.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/raon-2025-0009 | Journal eISSN: 1581-3207 | Journal ISSN: 1318-2099
Language: English
Page range: 450 - 456
Submitted on: Oct 28, 2024
Accepted on: Dec 19, 2024
Published on: Mar 19, 2025
Published by: Association of Radiology and Oncology
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2025 Aljaz Mercun, David Martincic, Blaz Mavcic, published by Association of Radiology and Oncology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.