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Microwave ablation of malignant extremity bone tumors.

BACKGROUND: The current application of limb salvage process has some unsolved problems, such as prosthesis loosening, which severely limits the function of the preserved limbs. Innovative approaches are needed to further improve functional outcome.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Instead of en-bloc resection of tumor-bearing bone, it is dissected from the surrounding normal tissues, followed by devitalizing the bone segment and the extra-cortical bulk by microwave induced hyperthermia in situ through the antenna array. From May 1999 to March 2012, 544 patients with malignant bone tumors of the extremities were treated by the novel method.

RESULTS: The over 3-year survival rate was 59.1 % for high-grade malignancy, 88.7 % for low-grade malignancy. In the majority of the patients, cosmetic and useful limbs were preserved. Local recurrence rate was 9.8 % for the high grade malignancy (mainly occurred at the early stage of the research). The overall fracture rate was 2.6 %. Deep infection rate was 1.8 %. The complication rate is lower than the literature reports. After heat necrosis, the dead bone maintains both the osteoconduction and osteoinduction properties.

CONCLUSIONS: The application of microwave induced hyperthermia for treatment of malignant bone tumors, except the late diagnosed cases who's tumor-bearing bone was destroyed too severe to do biological reconstruction, is an effective, simple, and inexpensive method. The oncological and functional results are encouraging.

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