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Survival and failure modes of the Compress® spindle and expandable distal femur endoprosthesis among pediatric patients: A multi‐institutional study
- Tanaka, Kara S;
- Andaya, Veronica R;
- Thorpe, Steven W;
- Gundle, Kenneth R;
- Hayden, James B;
- Duong, Yee‐Cheen;
- Avedian, Raffi S;
- Mohler, David G;
- Morse, Lee J;
- Zimel, Melissa N;
- O'Donnell, Richard J;
- Fang, Andrew;
- Randall, Robert Lor;
- Tran, Tina H;
- New, Christin;
- Wustrack, Rosanna L;
- FORCE, other members of Study Group
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1002/jso.27094Abstract
Background
Expandable endoprostheses can be used to equalize limb length for pediatric patients requiring reconstruction following large bony oncologic resections. Outcomes of the Compress® Compliant Pre-Stress (CPS) spindle paired with an Orthopedic Salvage System expandable distal femur endoprosthesis have not been reported.Methods
We conducted a multi-institutional retrospective study of pediatric patients with distal femoral bone sarcomas reconstructed with the above endoprostheses. Statistical analysis utilized Kaplan-Meier survival technique and competing risk analysis.Results
Thirty-six patients were included from five institutions. Spindle survivorship was 86.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 67.7-93.5) at 10 years. Two patients had a failure of osseointegration (5.7%), both within 12 months. Twenty-two (59%) patients had 70 lengthening procedures, with mean expansions of 3.2 cm (range: 1-9) over 3.4 surgeries. The expandable mechanism failed in eight patients with a cumulative incidence of 16.1% (95% CI, 5.6-31.5) at 5 years. Twenty-nine patients sustained International Society of Limb Salvage failures requiring 63 unplanned surgeries. Periprosthetic joint infection occurred in six patients (16.7%). Limb preservation rate was 91% at 10 years.Conclusions
There is a high rate of osseointegration of the Compress® spindle among pediatric patients when coupled with an expandable implant. However, there is a high rate of expansion mechanism failure and prosthetic joint infections requiring revision surgery.Level of evidence
Level IV, therapeutic study.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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