1.Vascularized proximal fibular epiphyseal transfer for shoulder reconstruction after tumor resection.
Estrella Emmanuel P. ; Lee Ellen Y. ; Wang Edward HM
Acta Medica Philippina 2012;46(2):64-68
We present a case of an 8-year-old girl with a high grade osteogenic sarcoma of the proximal humerus treated with wide resection and vascularized proximal humerus treated with wide resection and vascularized proximal fibular epiphyseal transfer. At 5 years after reconstruction, the patient is tumor free and had a Musculoskeletal Tumor Score of 26/30 or 86.7%. The functional outcomes in terms of shoulder range of motion and pain were good. Complications include transient peroneal nerve palsy and mild valgus instability of the knee.
Human ; Female ; Child ; Shoulder ; Peroneal Nerve ; Range Of Motion, Articular ; Fibula ; Humerus ; Knee Joint ; Pain ; Osteosarcoma
2.Osteosarcoma of the spine- A dilemma in diagnosis and management.
Villaruel Copernico J. ; Grozman Samuel Arsenio M. ; Wang Edward HM
Philippine Journal of Surgical Specialties 2010;65(1):32-36
Osteosarcoma of the spine accounts for 1 to 3 percent of osteosarcoma. When this afflication of the spine occurs, it is often fraught with diagnostic dilemmas and treatment challenges.
OBJECTIVE: This manuscript reports on the cases reported over a 15- year period from the UP Musculoskeletal Tumor Unit. Only 2 of the 3 cases were available for review.
RESULTS: Both patients were initially misdiagnosed. This delay in diagnosis led to a delay in instituting appropriate chemotheraphy inevitable causing poor outcomes of treatment.
CONCLUSION: This report highlights the dilemma of treating a difficult site. Spinal osteosarcoma presents with numerous diagnostics and management obstacles. Unless clinician awareness is improved and these treatment options become available to patients, prognosis will not improve.
Human ; Male ; Female ; Adult ; Osteosarcoma ; Bone Neoplasms ; Prognosis ; Spine ; Treatment Outcome
3.The prognostic value of pathologic fractures in patients with high-grade classic osteosarcoma.
Wang Edward H.M. ; Durban Claire Marie C ; Serrano Ma. Victoria T
Acta Medica Philippina 2012;46(2):9-12
Pathologic fracture in osteosarcoma has traditionally been associated with a poor prognosis and is an immediate indication for amputation of the affected extremity. This concept has been questioned and remains an area of debate, especially because advances in osteosarcoma treatment have today resulted in better survival and limb salvage rates.
It is the objectives of this paper to analyze the survival and limb salvage rate of osteosarcoma patients presenting with pathologic fractures and compare these with the population of osteosarcoma patients without pathologic fractures.
Over a 15-year period (1993-2008), these were 84 patients presenting with non-metastatic high-grade classic osteosarcoma of the extremities (Enneking Stage IIB) who received complete treatment from the University of the Philippines-Musculoskeletal Tumor (UP-MuST) Unit and who had a follow up of at least 2 years. Ten of these 84 patients had pathologic fractures prior to surgery. Their overall survival was 50%, similar to the 50.38% overall survival of the entire group of 84 osteosarcoma patients. Limb salvage rate was 60%, similar to the 59% rate of patients without pathologic fractures.
This study shows that contrary to traditional teaching, overall survival for this subset of osteosarcoma patients with pathologic fractures is acceptable at 50% and is equal to that of the entire group of osteosarcoma patients. At the same time, successful limb salvage surgery is possible despite the presence of a pathologic fracture, especially in patients with good response to chemotherapy.
Human ; Animal ; Male ; Female ; Middle Aged ; Adult ; Young Adult ; Adolescent ; Child ; Humans ; Limb Salvage ; Fractures, Spontaneous ; Follow-up Studies ; Philippines ; Osteosarcoma ; Amputation ; Salvage Therapy ; Extremities ; Prognosis ; Bone Neoplasms
4.Implementation of the IPACK (Infiltration between the Popliteal Artery and Capsule of the Knee) block into a multimodal analgesic pathway for total knee replacement
Brandon KANDARIAN ; Pier F INDELLI ; Sanjay SINHA ; Oluwatobi O HUNTER ; Rachel R WANG ; T Edward KIM ; Alex KOU ; Edward R MARIANO
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2019;72(3):238-244
BACKGROUND: The Infiltration between the Popliteal Artery and Capsule of the Knee (IPACK) block is a new anesthesiologist- administered analgesic technique for controlling posterior knee pain that has not yet been well studied in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. We compared pain outcomes in TKA patients before and after implementation of the IPACK with the hypothesis that patients receiving IPACK blocks will report lower pain scores on postoperative day (POD) 0 than non-IPACK patients. METHODS: With Institutional Review Board approval, we retrospectively reviewed data for consecutive TKA patients by a single surgeon 4 months before (PRE) and after (POST) IPACK implementation. All TKA patients received adductor canal catheters and peri-operative multimodal analgesia. The primary outcome was pain on POD 0. Other outcomes were daily pain scores, opioid consumption, ambulation distance, length of stay, and adverse events within 30 days. RESULTS: Post-implementation, 48/50 (96%) of TKA patients received an IPACK block, and they were compared with 32 patients in the PRE group. On POD 0, the lowest pain score (median [10th–90th percentiles]) was significantly lower for the POST group compared to the PRE group (0 [0–4.3] vs. 2.5 [0–7]; P = 0.003). The highest patient-reported pain scores on any POD were similar between groups with no differences in other outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Within a multimodal analgesic protocol, addition of IPACK blocks decreased the lowest pain scores on POD 0. Although other outcomes were unchanged, there may be a role for new opioid-sparing analgesic techniques, and changing clinical practice change can occur rapidly.
Analgesia
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Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee
;
Catheters
;
Ethics Committees, Research
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Humans
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Knee
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Length of Stay
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Popliteal Artery
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Retrospective Studies
;
Walking
5.Implementation of the IPACK (Infiltration between the Popliteal Artery and Capsule of the Knee) block into a multimodal analgesic pathway for total knee replacement
Brandon KANDARIAN ; Pier F INDELLI ; Sanjay SINHA ; Oluwatobi O HUNTER ; Rachel R WANG ; T Edward KIM ; Alex KOU ; Edward R MARIANO
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2019;72(3):238-244
BACKGROUND:
The Infiltration between the Popliteal Artery and Capsule of the Knee (IPACK) block is a new anesthesiologist- administered analgesic technique for controlling posterior knee pain that has not yet been well studied in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. We compared pain outcomes in TKA patients before and after implementation of the IPACK with the hypothesis that patients receiving IPACK blocks will report lower pain scores on postoperative day (POD) 0 than non-IPACK patients.
METHODS:
With Institutional Review Board approval, we retrospectively reviewed data for consecutive TKA patients by a single surgeon 4 months before (PRE) and after (POST) IPACK implementation. All TKA patients received adductor canal catheters and peri-operative multimodal analgesia. The primary outcome was pain on POD 0. Other outcomes were daily pain scores, opioid consumption, ambulation distance, length of stay, and adverse events within 30 days.
RESULTS:
Post-implementation, 48/50 (96%) of TKA patients received an IPACK block, and they were compared with 32 patients in the PRE group. On POD 0, the lowest pain score (median [10th–90th percentiles]) was significantly lower for the POST group compared to the PRE group (0 [0–4.3] vs. 2.5 [0–7]; P = 0.003). The highest patient-reported pain scores on any POD were similar between groups with no differences in other outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS
Within a multimodal analgesic protocol, addition of IPACK blocks decreased the lowest pain scores on POD 0. Although other outcomes were unchanged, there may be a role for new opioid-sparing analgesic techniques, and changing clinical practice change can occur rapidly.
6.Alternative Strategies for Central Venous Stenosis and Occlusion in Patients Requiring Haemodialysis Access.
Keith KOH ; Ye Xin KOH ; Edward Tc CHOKE ; John Cc WANG ; Ch'ng Jack KIAN
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2017;46(1):39-41
Angiography
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Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical
;
Brachiocephalic Veins
;
diagnostic imaging
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Collateral Circulation
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Constriction, Pathologic
;
diagnostic imaging
;
Female
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Humans
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Jugular Veins
;
diagnostic imaging
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Kidney Failure, Chronic
;
therapy
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Male
;
Middle Aged
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Phlebography
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Renal Dialysis
;
methods
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Subclavian Vein
;
diagnostic imaging
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Vascular Access Devices
7.Interobserver and Intraobserver Reliability of the Enneking Classification in Plain Radiographic Staging of Benign Bone Tumors of the Extremities in Patients Seen at the Philippine General Hospital
Bernardino II B. Alpuerto ; Edward H.M. Wang
Acta Medica Philippina 2021;55(3):341-348
OBJECTIVE: To determine the interobserver and intraobserver reliabilities of the Enneking Classification system in staging benign bone tumors.
METHODS: Photographs of traditional plain radiographs of 65 histologically benign tumors from the PGH Department of Orthopedics Tumor Registry were used in the study. Nine Orthopedic surgeons (three consultants, one fellow, and five senior residents) staged the tumors using the Enneking Classification based on radiographic tumor-host margins. The photographs were sent to the surgeons twice (batch 1 and 2), three months apart, for staging. The Fleiss and Cohen kappa statistics were used to determine interobserver and intraobserver reliabilities, respectively. This is a pilot study.
RESULTS: There was only fair interobserver reliability of the Enneking Classification staging with Fleiss kappa of 0.38 and 0.26 for batches 1 and 2, respectively. Also, there was only moderate intraobserver reliability (Cohen kappa 0.48) for the staging. Moreover, there was also a relatively low intraobserver percent agreement (67%) among raters. In both reliabilities, the consultants/fellow group consistently showed better interobserver and intraobserver reliabilities compared to the residents.
CONCLUSION: The Enneking Classification in staging benign bone tumors had relatively low interobserver and intraobserver reliabilities. There was also a tendency of experienced orthopedic tumor consultants and senior residents to stage the same radiograph differently upon repeat testing.
Reproducibility of Results
;
Neoplasms
8.Human Acellular Dermis versus Submuscular Tissue Expander Breast Reconstruction: A Multivariate Analysis of Short-Term Complications.
Armando A DAVILA ; Akhil K SETH ; Edward WANG ; Philip HANWRIGHT ; Karl BILIMORIA ; Neil FINE ; John YS KIM
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2013;40(1):19-27
BACKGROUND: Acellular dermal matrix (ADM) allografts and their putative benefits have been increasingly described in prosthesis based breast reconstruction. There have been a myriad of analyses outlining ADM complication profiles, but few large-scale, multi-institutional studies exploring these outcomes. In this study, complication rates of acellular dermis-assisted tissue expander breast reconstruction were compared with traditional submuscular methods by evaluation of the American College of Surgeon's National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) registry. METHODS: Patients who underwent immediate tissue expander breast reconstruction from 2006-2010 were identified using surgical procedure codes. Two hundred forty tracked variables from over 250 participating sites were extracted for patients undergoing acellular dermis-assisted versus submuscular tissue expander reconstruction. Thirty-day postoperative outcomes and captured risk factors for complications were compared between the two groups. RESULTS: A total of 9,159 patients underwent tissue expander breast reconstruction; 1,717 using acellular dermis and 7,442 with submuscular expander placement. Total complications and reconstruction related complications were similar in both cohorts (5.5% vs. 5.3%, P=0.68 and 4.7% vs. 4.3%, P=0.39, respectively). Multivariate logistic regression revealed body mass index and smoking as independent risk factors for reconstructive complications in both cohorts (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: The NSQIP database provides large-scale, multi-institutional, independent outcomes for acellular dermis and submuscular breast reconstruction. Both thirty-day complication profiles and risk factors for post operative morbidity are similar between these two reconstructive approaches.
Acellular Dermis
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Body Mass Index
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Breast
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Breast Implantation
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Cohort Studies
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Collagen
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Female
;
Humans
;
Logistic Models
;
Mammaplasty
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Prostheses and Implants
;
Quality Improvement
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Risk Factors
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Smoke
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Smoking
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Tissue Expansion Devices
;
Track and Field
;
Transplantation, Homologous
9.The Surgical Treatment and Outcome of Nonmetastatic Extremity Osteosarcoma with Pathological Fractures.
Zhi-Ping DENG ; Yi DING ; Ajay PURI ; Edward H M WANG ; Ashish GULIA ; Claire DURBAN ; Xiao-Hui NIU
Chinese Medical Journal 2015;128(19):2605-2608
BACKGROUNDRecent studies have suggested that the presence of a pathological fracture does not impact on oncologic outcomes and the feasibility of limb salvage surgery (LSS) in appropriately selected patients when combined with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. These have largely been single institutional studies with limited numbers. The Eastern Asian Musculoskeletal Oncology Group reviewed the data from three large volume Asian orthopedic oncology centers to determine whether the presence of a pathologic fracture affected outcomes in osteosarcoma patients.
METHODSA retrospective review of the data was conducted. Ninety-five cases of nonmetastatic extremity osteosarcoma with a pathological fracture and 887 cases without fracture treated during the same period were compared.
RESULTSIn the fracture group, the LSS rate was 62.1%, and the rate of amputation was 37.9%. In the nonfracture group, the LSS rate was 74.7%, and the amputation was 25.3%. In patients with a pathologic fracture, the rate of local recurrence for LSS and amputation groups was 8.5% and 2.8%, respectively. In this group, the 5-year survival in the LSS group was 66% as against. 46.8% in the amputation group.
CONCLUSIONSOur study suggests that surgically treated patients with pathologic fractures in osteosarcoma have adequate local control and do not have a poorer outcome compared to patients without a fracture. Though osteosarcoma with a pathologic fracture is not a contraindication for limb salvage, appropriate case selection is important when deciding local control options to ensure adequate oncologic clearance.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Bone Neoplasms ; complications ; surgery ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Extremities ; pathology ; surgery ; Female ; Fractures, Spontaneous ; etiology ; surgery ; Humans ; Limb Salvage ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ; complications ; surgery ; Osteosarcoma ; complications ; surgery ; Retrospective Studies ; Young Adult
10.Osteosarcoma in the preadolescent Filipino patient
Wang Edward H.M. ; Valenzuela Julius N. ; Decenteceo Ana Cristina D. ; Dy Amy Goleta ; Alcasabas Ana Patricia A. ; Vergel De Dios Ariel M. ; Serrano Ma. Victoria T. ; Dimayuga Cesar L. ; Quintos Albert Jerome C.
Acta Medica Philippina 2011;45(2):24-29
Objective. Classic high-grade osteosarcoma is uncommon in preadolescents (less than or equal to 10 years of age). The possibilities of
clinicopathologic differences from the typical adolescent osteosarcoma patient have been raised. We sought to compare the presentation, treatment and survival of this subgroup of patients with published rates in order to determine if there is a need to use a treatment regimen different from that for regular adolescent osteosarcoma patients.
Methods. Records of the University of the Philippines-Musculoskeletal Tumor Unit (UP-MuST) over a 15-year period (1993-2008) were reviewed and data collected on patients 10 years and younger with biopsy-proven classic high-grade intramedullary osteosarcoma who underwent complete treatment by the Unit. Demographics and survival rates were then compared with published rates for preadolescent and regular adolescent osteosarcoma cases.
Results. There were fourteen patients; (6M:8F; age: 4-10 years). The most common presentation was a painful mass in the distal femur (8); the tumors most commonly had osteoblastic histology (12). Treatment consisted of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, wide surgical excision through ablation (9) or limb-saving surgery (5), and postoperative chemotherapy. There was a good histologic response (over 90% tumor necrosis) in four patients. Seven patients are ANED (alive no evidence of disease) 25 to 186 months after diagnosis. Five-year survival estimate is 52%, compared to a dismal 5 to 10% 15 years ago.
Conclusion. Clinicopathologic presentation, clinical course, and overall survival in this subgroup of patients are comparable with published results for both preadolescent and adolescent osteosarcoma patients. There is no need to alter the present treatment regimen for this group of young patients.
Human
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Male
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Female
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Child
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Child Preschool
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OSTEOSARCOMA
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THERAPEUTICS
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THERAPY
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NEOPLASMS
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NEOPLASMS BY HISTOLOGIC TYPE
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NEOPLASMS, CONNECTIVE AND SOFT TISSUE
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NEOPLASMS, CONNECTIVE TISSUE
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NEOPLASMS, BONE TISSUE
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