Experiences in limb salvage using mega prosthesis

Abstract

Megaprostheses are increasingly used in limb salvage after large tumor resections, severe fractures, or as a salvage procedure after complications to conventional arthroplasty. These prostheses are used in patients with a diversity in age, indication and tumor location. Aim: This thesis aimed to report on incidence, type, outcome, and complications as well as the patients’ experience of complications of megaprosthesis surgery, and to evaluate a novel method for diagnosing of aseptic loosening of distal femur megaprostheses reconstructions. Methods: Medical records for all patients provided with a megaprosthesis at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in 2006–2019 were evaluated. Data regarding complications, reoperations, indication for surgery, and prosthesis survival over time were collected (Studies I and II). A subgroup of patients was interviewed after treatment for a periprosthetic infection, and the data were qualitatively analyzed using a phenomenological method (Study III). CT-RSA with induced displacement was applied in a cohort of patients with pain after a distal femur megaprosthesis, to determine the movements between bone and implant, and its relation to patients’ pain scoring (Study IV). Results: In total, 114 patients with 116 megaprostheses were included. Fifty-six percent underwent at least one reoperation. Infection was the most common complication, diagnosed in 35/114 patients. Amputation was performed in 16 patients, nine for infection and seven for tumour relapse. At the end of follow-up (1.3–13.3 years), 83% of the patients had a functional prosthesis (Studies I and II). In the interviews conducted with patients treated for periprosthetic infections, the infection and its treatment were found to have had large impact on both physical function and self-image (Study III). In CT-RSA with induced displacement, movement in translation varied between 0.11 and 3.46 mm and in rotation between 0 and 2.95º in the investigated cohort. Making a pain drawing indicating severe pain characteristics corresponded well with a measured suspected pathological movement between bone and implant (Study IV). Conclusions: Megaprostheses are a reliable method for reconstruction of large skeletal defects but are associated with a high frequency of complications. Especially periprosthetic infections are demanding to treat and had clear effects on the patient’s experienced function and self-image. CT-RSA with induced displacement might be a valuable method for diagnosing aseptic loosening, but further studies are warranted.

Description

Keywords

megaprostheses, limb salvage, complications, periprosthetic infection, phenomenology, qualitative method, CT-RSA

Citation

ISBN

978-91-8115-431-3 (print)
978-91-8115-432-0 (PDF)

Articles

I. Berger C, Larsson S, Bergh P, Brisby H, Wennergren D The risk for complications and reoperations with the use of mega prostheses in bone reconstructions Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research, 2021 Oct 14;16(1):598. http://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-021-02749-z

II. Berger C, Parai C, Tillander J, Wennergren D, Brisby H High risk for persistent peri-prosthetic infection and amputation in mega-prosthesis reconstruction. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023 May, 20;12(10):3575. http://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12103575

III. Berger C, Brisby H, Wennergren D, Wijk H, Angelini E Experience of periprosthetic infection in sarcoma patients following megaprosthetic reconstruction Bone and Joint Open, Accepted, 2025 Sep

IV. Berger C, Sharegi B, Hutchins J, Sandberg O, Brisby H CT-RSA with induced displacement used for assessment of aseptic loosening of distal femur reconstructions with megaprostheses in patients reporting pain Submitted

Department

Institute of Clinical Sciences. Department of Orthopaedics

Defence location

Fredagen den 12 december 2025, kl. 9.00, R-aulan, Mölndals sjukhus, Länsmansgatan 28, Mölndal

Endorsement

Review

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