Affiliation:
1. Department of Orthopaedics, Peterborough City Hospital, Peterborough - UK
Abstract
We report on the survival of 145 patients presenting to a single centre with a pathological metastatic fracture of the proximal femur. The single surviving patient had a follow-up of 17.7 years. Mean survival for the 144 patients who died was 332 days (range 2 to 3053 days), being longest for those with myeloma (662 days), lymphoma (> 633 days) and breast tumours (477 days) and lowest for lung tumours (110 days). The most common sites for the primary tumour were breast (36%), prostate (23%) and lung (17%). 47% of fractures were intracapsular, 28% trochanteric and 25% subtrochanteric. 99% of the fractures were treated surgically with a mean hospital stay of 19 days. The commonest fracture healing complication was further fracture of the femur around or immediately below the implant which occurred after 9/144 (6.2%) of operations. The difference in survival of patients related to the primary tumour site is of relevance in planning surgical treatment and discussing prognosis with patients.
Subject
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
Cited by
20 articles.
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