Ortopedia y Traumatología

Ortopedia y Traumatología
Cirugía de Tumores Óseos

miércoles, 26 de noviembre de 2014

WHO Classification Changes for Soft-Tissue and Bone Tumors

Este artículo fue publicado originalmente en:

http://www.cancernetwork.com/sarcoma/who-classification-changes-soft-tissue-and-bone-tumors


WHO Classification Changes for Soft-Tissue and Bone Tumors

In 2013, the World Health Organization (WHO) published an updated classification of tumors of the soft tissue and bone. This new publication was published 11 years after the last publication dealing with this topic and provides updates predominantly based on the identification of new genetic findings in different tumors types.
In a review published recently in Cancer, Leona A. Doyle, MD, discussed the major classification changes in the current 2013 WHO classification, along with new genetic data that has emerged even since the publication of the current volume.
“This refinement has led to more reproducible classifications of soft-tissue and bone tumors, thereby allowing for more effective treatment stratification,” Doyle told Cancer Network. “It has also allowed wastebasket diagnostic categories and obsolete tumor types such as hemangiopericytoma and so-called malignant fibrous histiocytoma to be removed from the 2013 WHO classification, with the recognition that these groups included many tumors which can now be accurately classified as specific sarcoma types.”

Soft-Tissue Tumors

In her review, Doyle first addresses soft-tissue tumors and notes that the most notable change to the WHO classification is the elimination of the term “round cell liposarcoma.” This term was used to describe the morphologic appearance of a subset of high-grade myxoid liposarcoma, which most often demonstrates spindle cell morphology. Research has demonstrated that spindle cell and round cell morphology both have the same genetic findings and the same prognostic information, eliminating the need to distinguish between the two.
In addition, mixed-type liposarcoma was removed as a classification with consensus opinion stating that tumors showing this pattern “most likely represent dedifferentiated liposarcoma.” Malignant fibrous histiocytoma was also removed as a classification because many of these tumors can now be classified as specific sarcoma types.
Among the new additions to the classification are dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans and giant cell fibroblastoma, which were previously described in the WHO volume on skin tumors.
Also, for the first time, gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) and nerve sheath tumors are now included in the soft-tissue classification.
“The most notable change in the classification of GIST is the recognition of the category of ‘succinate dehydrogenase (SDH)-deficient GIST,’ ” Doyle wrote. “Tumors in this group are wild-type for KIT and PDGFRA mutations, and demonstrate loss of expression of the SDH complex, subunit B (SDHB) protein immunohistochemically, which reflects dysfunction of the SDH enzyme complex of the Krebs cycle.”
The addition of the category of undifferentiated/unclassified sarcoma is also new to the 2013 WHO Classification, and recognizes those tumors that cannot be classified into any of the other categories, due to lack of a demonstrable line of differentiation or lack of distinguishing histologic, immunohistochemical, or genetic features. 
“Examples of recently described distinct entities and new genetic findings described for the first time in this volume include pseudomyogenic hemangioendothelioma and phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor, the presence of MYH9-USP6 fusion gene in nodular fasciitis, and the WWTR1-CAMTA1 fusion gene in epithelioid hemangioendothelioma,” Doyle said.

Bone Tumors

Doyle also detailed many of the changes and updates made to the classification of bone tumors.
Chondrosarcoma are now separated into two ICD codes, reflecting the prognostic difference based on disease grade. Significant genetic findings for chondrosarcoma are also discussed in the updated classification, with the recognition of the role of mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 genes, which code for the metabolic enzymes IDH1 and IDH2.
Fibrosarcoma of bone is now classified as a diagnosis of exclusion. Tumors classified as fibrosarcoma of bone are intermediate- to high-grade spindle cell malignant neoplasms and lack any line of differentiation other than fibroblastic.
According to the review article this new classification addressed several issues. “First, although historically the classification of fibrosarcoma of bone was used relatively commonly, it is now recognized that a fascicular or ‘herringbone’ pattern of growth may be observed in many different tumors types that can be classified on other specific diagnostic categories,” Doyle wrote. “Second, this pattern of growth may also be seen in otherwise unclassified high-grade pleomorphic sarcomas, and if significant pleomorphism is present the tumor is best classified as the latter.”
The 2013 WHO Classification of Tumors of Soft Tissue and Bone include many other updates, deletions, and reclassification of these tumor types that reflect the recent and ongoing advances made in the field.

Proyectos de secuenciación de genes que vinculan dos mutaciones para el sarcoma de Ewing subtipo con mal pronóstico / Gene sequencing projects link two mutations to Ewing sarcoma subtype with poor prognosis

Este artículo es publicado originalmente en:
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-11-gene-sequencing-link-mutations-ewing.html


Gene sequencing projects link two mutations to Ewing sarcoma subtype with poor prognosis

Gene sequencing projects link two mutations to Ewing sarcoma subtype with poor prognosis
This Ewing sarcoma tumor in this MRI image of the lower extremities involves the right tibia bone (white arrow) and is associated with a soft tissue mass (black arrows). Credit: Drs. Navid, Coleman, Hillenbrand/St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
An international collaboration has identified frequent mutations in two genes that often occur together in Ewing sarcoma (EWS) and that define a subtype of the cancer associated with reduced survival. The research, conducted by the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital-Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project and the Institut Curie-Inserm through the International Cancer Genome Consortium, appears in the current issue of the scientific journal Cancer Discovery.
Mutations in the genes STAG2 and TP53 have previously been linked to EWS. This is the first study to show that patients whose tumors carry alterations in both genes are less likely to survive than are patients without the changes. The discovery stems from the most comprehensive analysis yet of the genetic makeup of EWS, a cancer of the bone and soft tissue that primarily strikes children and adolescents.
The findings come as St. Jude finalizes plans for clinical trials of EWS combination therapy. A recent St. Jude study showed combination therapy was effective in mice with EWS that included both mutations. The agents work by damaging DNA or interfering with cellular repair mechanisms.
"The current study used whole-genome sequencing to define the most comprehensive landscape yet of the genetic alterations that contribute to the growth and recurrence of Ewing sarcoma," said Jinghui Zhang, Ph.D., a member of the St. Jude Department of Computational Biology. Zhang and Olivier Delattre, M.D., Ph.D., head of the genetic and biology of pediatric cancer group of Institut Curie, Paris, are the study's corresponding authors.
"With the combined expertise of St. Jude and Institut Curie, we were able to identify a subtype with a dismal prognosis based on a tumor's genetic profile. This is an important step in developing more effective diagnosis and treatment," Zhang said.
The study involved sequencing the complete normal and cancer genomes of 112 EWS patients, including children, teenagers and young adults. The genome is encoded in the DNA molecule carried in almost every cell and carries the instructions needed to assemble and sustain life.
"The Institut Curie is a reference center in France for Ewing sarcoma. Twenty-two years ago, my team identified the EWSR1-FLI1 gene fusion, a pathogenomonic marker and a key pathogenic event in this disease. Thanks to this French-U.S. collaboration, we now have a more complete picture of the different genetic abnormalities that can be associated with EWSR1- FLI1 and may hence contribute to its aggressiveness. Hopefully, this may lead to improve treatment strategies," Delattre said.
EWS is identified in about 250 children and adolescents annually in the U.S., making it the second most common pediatric bone tumor. With current therapies, 75 to 80 percent of patients whose disease has not spread will become long-term survivors. But the prognosis is bleak for other patients.
Nearly all EWS begins with a chromosomal rearrangement that fuses part of the EWSR1 gene with a segment of FLI1 or a related gene. The fusion leads to production of an abnormal protein, which disrupts regulation of genes involved in cell growth and survival.
This study focused on identifying the genetic changes that follow the chromosomal rearrangement and help drive tumor formation.
"Identifying these changes using whole-genome sequencing and understanding how they alter survival can be critical to developing more effective treatments," said co-author Richard K. Wilson, Ph.D., director of The Genome Institute at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
Whole genome sequencing revealed that unlike adult cancers, EWS is characterized by relatively few mutations. The most commonly altered gene identified in this study was STAG2, which was mutated in 17 percent of the 112 tumors sequenced. The tumor suppressor gene TP53 was mutated in 7 percent of the tumors.
When researchers checked for the alterations in 299 French EWS patients, they found that STAG2 and TP53 mutations often occurred together and were associated with poor outcomes. Patients whose tumors include both mutations were far less likely than patients with neither mutation to be alive five years after their cancer was discovered. Mutations in either STAG2 or TP53 alone were not associated with a significantly worse outcome.
TP53 is the most frequently altered gene in human cancer. STAG2 mutations have been identified in a variety of cancers, including the brain tumor glioblastoma, the skin cancer melanoma and bladder cancer. In this study, the mutations inactivated the STAG2 gene. The gene carries instructions for assembling the STAG2 protein, which is part of a protein complex that ensures chromosomes separate normally during cell division.
St. Jude researchers recently identified a promising three-drug combination therapy for EWS with STAG2 and TP53 mutations. The treatment combines the chemotherapy drugs irinotecan and temozolomide, which are already used to treat EWS, with investigational drugs called PARP inhibitors. EWS disappeared and did not return in more than 70 percent of mice treated with the combination therapy.
Clinical trials of the combination therapies for treatment of EWS are expected to open later this year at St. Jude and Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center in Boston. The trials will involve EWS patients whose cancer remained following standard therapy or has returned.
In the current study, researchers detailed other insights regarding the role of STAG2 mutations in EWS. The findings included evidence the mutation was associated with relapse in several patients.
While STAG2 and TP53 mutations frequently occurred together in EWS, researchers found that mutations in STAG2 and the CDKN2A gene were usually mutually exclusive. CDKN2A carries instructions for making proteins that regulate cell division. Mutations in CDKN2A have been reported in EWS and other cancers, but this is the first study to recognize that CDKN2A and STAG2 mutations rarely occur together in EWS. The finding provides important insight into the tumor's genetic profile, which will aid efforts to develop more effective therapies.

Penn Chief of Orthopaedic Oncology Kristy Weber Elected President of the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society

http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/news/News_Releases/2014/07/weber/

PHILADELPHIA — Kristy Weber, MD, chief of Orthopaedic Oncology in the department of Orthopaedic Surgery at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and director of the Sarcoma Program in Penn’s Abramson Cancer Center, is now serving as the President of the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS)...




New Anti-Tumor Properties Of Old Bone Drugs

http://www.asianscientist.com/2014/11/in-the-lab/anti-tumor-properties-bone-drugs/


New Anti-Tumor Properties Of Old Bone Drugs

this is my caption
Featured Research
November 11, 2014
Drugs currently used to treat osteoporosis could also be used to treat soft tissue cancers, scientists say.
AsianScientist (Nov. 11, 2014) – Researchers have shown why calcium-binding drugs commonly used to treat people with osteoporosis or late-stage cancers that have spread to bone may also benefit patients with tumors outside the skeleton, including breast cancer. This study has been published in the journalCancer Discovery.
Source: Garvan Institute.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

martes, 25 de noviembre de 2014

Allegheny Health Network Recruits Orthopaedic Oncologist Lisa Beth Ercolano, MD

Artículo originalmente publicado en :
http://globenewswire.com/news-release/2014/11/18/684024/10108762/en/Allegheny-Health-Network-Recruits-Orthopaedic-Oncologist-Lisa-Beth-Ercolano-MD.html


Allegheny Health Network Recruits Orthopaedic Oncologist Lisa Beth Ercolano, MD

Dr. Ercolano is among a very select group of fellowship-trained orthopaedic oncologists practicing in the United States.

 ET | Source: Allegheny Health Network
PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 18, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via PRWEB - Fellowship-trained orthopaedic oncologist Lisa Beth Ercolano, MD, has joined Allegheny Health Network, where she will specialize in the surgical treatment of benign and malignant bone tumors in both children and adults.
Dr. Ercolano comes to Allegheny Health Network from Massachusetts General Hospital, where she was a clinical fellow in orthopaedics and a fellow in the combined Harvard/Massachusetts General Clinical Fellowship in Orthopaedic Oncology.

IMPRESIÓN 3D: Amputación evitada gracias a la impresión 3D

http://www.emprendedoresnews.com/impresion-3d-2/impresion-3d-amputacion-evitada-gracias-a-la-impresion-3d.html


IMPRESIÓN 3D: Amputación evitada gracias a la impresión 3D

La historia ha ocurrido en Australia y, más concretamente, en  Melbourne, donde un hombre de 71 años ha evitado la amputación de su pierna con un nuevo implante impreso en 3D.
A Len Chandler le diagnosticaron un cáncer en el calcáneo en el mes de abril y sufrió gradualmente los estragos de la enfermedad, hasta el punto de haber perdido recientemente el uso de sus talones.
Los pacientes con cáncer en el calcáneo a menudo pierden la pierna por debajo de la rodilla, debido a una posible fractura del hueso calcáneo o del talón.
Además, también es muy difícil de reemplazar un hueso altamente complejo, que debe moverse en tándem con los huesos de la espinilla y el pie.
Afortunadamente, se cruzó en su camino el profesor Choong, jefe del departamento de ortopedia del Hospital St. Vincent, en Melbourne. Con su equipo de cirujanos, el profesor decidió usar la impresión 3D para reemplazar el hueso que faltaba en el paciente con un implante e impedir así la amputación de la pierna, a la que se veía abocado en los próximos meses.
El equipo escaneó primero el pie izquierdo del señor Chandler, libre de tumor. Las imágenes escaneadas del pie fueron enviadas  al fabricante de implantes con sede en Melbourne, Anatomics , que creó un diseño de imagen especular de su pie derecho. A continuación CSIRO, la agencia de investigación primaria de Australia, utilizó el modelo 3D para construir una réplica exacta del hueso, el calcáneo, en titanio, utilizando para ello su impresora de metal fabricada por la compañía sueca Arcam y que utiliza un sistema de haces de electrones.
Por último, los cirujanos trabajaron en la extirpación del tumor y en el implante de la pieza impresa en 3D en el paciente.
El implante debía incluir una parte lisa para coincidir con otros huesos, tendones y músculos y también una parte porosa, para permitir que se fijara el tejido.
La cirugía pionera tuvo lugar el 11 de julio de 2014. Ahora, el señor Chandler ya puede sostener más de la mitad de su peso corporal y se espera que sea capaz de caminar sin muletas por Navidad.
“El profesor Choong dijo que podíamos correr el riesgo, y no tenía nada que perder. Yo dudaba y no sabía si funcionaría, pero tenía que intentarlo”, ha declarado el paciente, que ha salvado su pierna gracias a la impresión 3D.
fuente: Imprimalia

Sobre el autor

Marcelo Berenstein: Periodista con más de 20 años profesión. Director de Emprendedores.News, el portal de habla hispana para emprendedores más visitado. Autor del libro “201 Mensajes para Emprender y Liderar”. Conferencista internacional sobre entrepreneurship, liderazgo y motivación

lunes, 24 de noviembre de 2014

Discusión entre pares / Fem 30 años de edad química ósea normal,

https://www.facebook.com/groups/100319906722679/
MAGDALENOS EN APUROS!!!!

Fem 30 años de edad química ósea normal,

jueves, 20 de noviembre de 2014

Discusión entre pares / 18 yr old girl...hard swelling. .pain..and minimal deformity of lt wrist...since 3 yrs..gradually increasing




18 yr old girl...hard swelling. .pain..and minimal deformity of lt wrist...since 3 yrs..gradually increasing.