Conservative surgery with microwave ablation for recurrent bone tumor in the extremities: a single-center study

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Abstract

Background: Surgical treatment for recurrent bone tumors in the extremities still presents a challenge. This study was designed to evaluate the clinical value of microwave ablation in the treatment of recurrent bone tumors. Methods: We present 15 patients who underwent microwave ablation for recurrent bone tumors during the last 7 years. The following parameters were analyzed for outcome evaluation: general condition, surgical complications, local disease control, overall survival, and functional score measured using the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS) 93 scoring system. Results: Percutaneous microwave ablation in one patient with osteoid osteoma and another with bone metastasis resulted in postoperative pain relief. Thirteen patients received intraoperative microwave ablation before curettage or resection, including those with giant cell tumors of bone (6), chondroblastoma (2), osteosarcoma (2), undifferentiated sarcoma (1), and bone metastases (2). All patients achieved reasonable local tumor control in the mean follow-up of 29.9 months. The functional score was 24.1 for the 15 patients 6 months after the operation. Four patients had tumor metastasis and died, whereas 3 patients with tumors survived, and the remaining 8 patients without the disease survived. Conclusions: Microwave ablation represents an optional method for local control in treating recurrent bone tumors in the extremities.

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Zheng, K., Yu, X. chun, Xu, M., & Wang, J. ming. (2022). Conservative surgery with microwave ablation for recurrent bone tumor in the extremities: a single-center study. BMC Cancer, 22(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-022-10233-y

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