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412430

Extended curettage, bone grafting, and spanning external fixation for the treatment of juxta-articular giant cell tumor of the bone around the knee

Article

Last updated: 25 Feb 2025

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Abstract

Background
Treatment of juxta-articular giant cell tumor (GCT) of the bone around the knee remains a dilemma. Many authors recommend cementing, others grafting after extended curettage and others resect and replace by a modular prosthesis. Biological reconstruction remains the cornerstone of our belief in the treatment of GCT.
Materials and methods
A retrospective review was conducted of GCT around the knee treated between 2000 and 2012 using the technique of extended curettage through a large bone window in situ pasteurization (ISP), followed by bone grafting and spanning external fixation. Thirty patients (10 men, 20 women), aged from 15 to 67 years (average 38 years) with a mean duration of follow-up of 46 months (range: 24–188 months) were identified. The GCTs were staged according to the system of Campanacci and colleagues. Six lesions were classified as stage I, 18 as stage II, and six as stage III. Four patients had an intra-articular fracture of the distal femur at the time of diagnosis.
Results
All 30 patients are continuously free of disease and there is no local recurrence. Functional evaluation was performed by the International Society of Limb Salvage score criteria. The average functional score was 95% (77–100%). None of the patients complained of pain and none of the patients demonstrated serious instability of the knee joint. All the patients showed union starting from 2 months after surgery with full consolidation 6 months after surgery. The fixator was removed at 4–12 months after surgery. Radiologically, 29 (97%) patients had complete incorporation of the graft (>75% of the International Society of Limb Salvage score) and one (3%) patient had partial incorporation (<75% of the International Society of Limb Salvage score). The overall average radiographic evaluation rating was 97%. Osteoarthritis of the knee joint was not seen in any of our patients. Four patients had intra-articular fracture of the distal femur at presentation; all healed eventually and did not affect the final results.
Conclusion
Extended curettage, ISP bone grafting, and spanning external fixation is a safe and effective procedure for the treatment of juxta-articular GCT of the bone around the knee.

DOI

10.4103/eoj.eoj_79_17

Keywords

Extended Curettage, External fixation, Giant Cell Tumor

Authors

First Name

Adel

Last Name

Ahmed

MiddleName

R.

Affiliation

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Orcid

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Volume

52

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

53889

Issue Date

2017-10-01

Publish Date

2017-10-01

Page Start

321

Page End

327

Print ISSN

1110-1148

Online ISSN

2090-9926

Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/article_412430.html

Detail API

http://journals.ekb.eg?_action=service&article_code=412430

Order

412,430

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Orthopaedic Journal

Publication Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Extended curettage, bone grafting, and spanning external fixation for the treatment of juxta-articular giant cell tumor of the bone around the knee

Details

Type

Article

Created At

25 Feb 2025