Browsing by Author "Catanzano, Anthony A"
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Item Open Access Epidemiologic and survival trends in adult primary bone tumors of the spine.(The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society, 2019-12) Kerr, David L; Dial, Brian L; Lazarides, Alexander L; Catanzano, Anthony A; Lane, Whitney O; Blazer, Dan G; Brigman, Brian E; Mendoza-Lattes, Sergio; Eward, William C; Erickson, Melissa EBackground context
Malignant primary spinal tumors are rare making it difficult to perform large studies comparing epidemiologic, survival, and treatment trends. We investigated the largest registry of primary bone tumors, the National Cancer Database (NCDB), to compare epidemiologic and survival trends among these tumors.Purpose
To use the NCDB to describe current epidemiologic trends, treatment modalities, and overall survival rates in patients with chordomas, osteosarcomas, chondrosarcomas, and Ewing sarcomas of the mobile spine. The secondary objective was to determine prognostic factors that impact overall survival rates.Study design
Retrospective study.Patient sample
A total of 1,011 patients with primary bone tumors of the spine (377 chordomas, 223 chondrosarcomas, 278 Ewing sarcomas, and 133 osteosarcomas).Outcome measures
Five-year survival.Methods
We reviewed the records of 1,011 patients in the NCDB from 2004 through 2015 with histologically confirmed primary osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, or chordoma of the spine. Demographic, clinical, and outcomes data were compiled and compared using chi-squared tests and ANOVA. Long-term survival was compared using the Kaplan-Meier method with statistical comparisons based on the log-rank test. Multivariate analysis was performed to determine survival determinants.Results
Surgical resection was the primary mode of treatment for chondrosarcoma (90%), chordoma (84%), and osteosarcoma (80%). The treatment for Ewing sarcoma was multimodal involving chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgical resection. Five-year survival rates varied significantly with chordomas and chondrosarcomas having the greatest survival (70% and 69%), osteosarcomas having the worse survival (38%), and Ewing having intermediate 5-year survival at 62% (overall log-rank p<.0001). Multivariate analysis demonstrated significantly improved 5-year survival rates with younger age at diagnosis, private insurance status, lower comorbidity score, lower tumor grade, smaller tumor size, surgical resection, and negative surgical margin. Radiation therapy only improved survival for Ewing sarcoma.Conclusions
This study provides the most comprehensive description of the epidemiologic, treatment, and survival trends of primary bone tumors of the mobile spine. Second, patient and tumor characteristics associated with improved 5-year survival were identified using a multivariate model.Item Open Access Vascularized Fibula-Based Physis Transfer: A Follow-Up Study of Longitudinal Bone Growth and Complications.(Plastic and reconstructive surgery. Global open, 2017-05-25) Shammas, Ronnie L; Avashia, Yash J; Farjat, Alfredo E; Catanzano, Anthony A; Levin, L Scott; Eward, William C; Brigman, Brian E; Erdmann, DetlevBackground
The vascularized free fibula epiphyseal transfer provides an option for the preservation of limb lengthening after resection of the proximal humerus in pediatric sarcoma patients. The purpose of this study was to provide a long-term follow-up of longitudinal growth patterns and outcomes after free fibula epiphyseal transfer in upper extremity reconstruction.Methods
A retrospective review of 4 patients who underwent free fibula epiphyseal transfer after oncologic resection of the proximal humerus for osteosarcoma was performed. Oncologic details that could affect outcomes were included in the review: primary tumor pathology, location of malignancy, and presence of recurrence. Details on the reconstruction included longitudinal growth of the flap from the time of implantation to the most recently available radiograph and postoperative complications. The length of the fibula over time was measured from the humeral head to the olecranon process.Results
All patients were alive at the start of this study. The average longitudinal growth rate of the free fibula epiphyseal transfer was 0.54 ± 0.18 cm/y, and patients demonstrated satisfactory and consistent longitudinal bone growth and hypertrophy over time. All 4 patients suffered from a complication of postoperative fibula graft fracture, and 1 of 4 patients experienced unremitting peroneal nerve damage. All patients demonstrated normal wrist and hand motion with a normal arc of elbow flexion and extension.Conclusion
This study demonstrates that the vascularized fibula epiphyseal transfer offers the ability to preserve longitudinal limb growth and hypertrophy throughout adolescence.