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Silent but deadly how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

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Page 1: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma

Craig Gerrand

Consultant Orthopaedic SurgeonFreeman Hospital, Newcastle

Page 2: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Introduction

• What is a sarcoma, and why does it matter?

• Who gets sarcomas?• What is the best treatment for a

sarcoma?• How can I tell a sarcoma from a

ganglion?

Page 3: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

What is a lipoma?

Benign tumour of mature adipose tissue

Page 4: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

What is a ganglion?

A simple fluid filled cyst usually arising from a joint or tendon.

Page 5: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

What is a sarcoma?

Page 6: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Bone and soft tissue sarcomas

• Are rare malignant tumours arising from connective tissues

• Heterogenous in type and location

• Most are mesenchymal in origin

Page 7: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

How rare is rare?

• Soft tissue masses are common (many hundreds in a GP lifetime)

• Malignant soft tissue sarcomas are uncommon (1 or 2 in a GP lifetime)

• England and Wales- 400 primary bone tumours per annum- 1500 soft tissue sarcomas per annum

Page 8: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

How malignant 1?

• Survival of all patients with bone sarcomas

Page 9: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

How malignant 3?

• Survival of all patients with soft tissue sarcomas

Page 10: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Primary bone tumoursMorphological classification

• Over 30 variants

Histological type Benign Malignant

Haemopoetic Myeloma Lymphoma

Chondrogenic Osteochondroma Chondroblastoma Chondromyxoid fibroma

Chondrosarcoma

Osteogenic Osteoid osteoma Osteosarcoma

Unknown Giant cell tumour Ewing’s tumour

Fibrogenic Benign fibrous histiocytoma

Malignant fibrous histiocytoma

Notochordal Chordoma

Page 11: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Soft tissue sarcoma Morphological classification

• Over 100 variants

Mesenchymal differentiation

Other differentiation, consistent pattern

No specific differentation, variable

pattern

Liposarcoma Leiomyosarcoma Rhabdomyosarcoma Angiosarcoma MPNST Osteosarcoma Chondrosarcoma Fibrosarcoma

Synovial sarcoma Epithelioid sarcoma Clear cell sarcoma Ewing sarcoma/PNET Alveolar soft parts sarcoma

MFH Sarcoma NOS

Page 12: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Aetiology

• Most are sporadic• Predisposing factors

- inherited predisposition- immunosuppression- irradiation- specific chemicals

• Genetic changes within cells lead to tumours

Page 13: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Age distribution of primary bone tumours

Page 14: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Age distribution of soft tissue sarcomas

Page 15: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Soft Tissue SarcomaDistribution

• 55% extremities• 35% retroperitoneum and

viscera• 10% head and neck

Page 16: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

What is the best treatment for sarcomas?

Page 17: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Best treatment

• Early detection and referral• Multidisciplinary team

management

Page 18: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Why refer early?

• Delays in diagnosis are common• Risk of metastasis relates to size

of tumour

Page 19: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Where do delays occur?

• Patient (7 months)• GP (7 months)• Hospital

Page 20: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Biopsy of sarcomas

Sarcomas are implantable

Therefore

Careful planning is mandatory

Page 21: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

The Whoops! procedure

• Excision without regard to principles of tumour surgery and usually without imaging

• ie tumour “shelled out” without considering the possibility of malignancy

• Further treatment complicated

Page 22: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Principles of biopsy

• Image first• Careful planning with regard to definitive

surgery• If in doubt, discuss!• Excise the biopsy track during definitive

surgery• Extensile incisions• Avoid neurovascular structures • Good haemostasis• Drain through or close to the wound

Page 23: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Treatment of sarcomas

• Multidisciplinary team • Combined approach with

radiotherapy, surgery and chemotherapy

• Specialist centre

Page 24: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Patient perspective

• Rare tumour• Often incorrectly reassured• May have to travel for treatment

Page 25: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Low grade fatty tumours

• Low risk of local recurrence• Low risk of metastatic disease• Treatment by planned marginal

excision

Page 26: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Indications for amputation

• Adequate margins not possible with limb salvage

• Major complications of radiotherapy would follow

• A below knee amputation may be more serviceable than a salvaged distal extremity

• Some cases of local recurrence may not be treatable by standard surgery and radiotherapy

Page 27: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

The future

• Changes in administrative structure (NICE, NSCAG, NCRI)

• Better identification of risk groups

• Better chemotherapy• Better radiotherapy• Tissue engineering• Gene therapy• New imaging modalities

Page 28: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Who to refer 1?

• Soft tissue masses- Size >5cm- Painful- Increasing in size- Deep to fascia- Recurring after previous excision

Page 29: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Who to refer 2?

• Undiagnosed bone pain needs an x-ray!

• Bone abnormalities on X-ray- Bone destruction- New bone formation- Associated soft tissue swelling- Periosteal elevation

Page 30: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

North of England Bone and Soft Tissue Tumour Service

• Orthopaedics- Shona Murray- Craig Gerrand- Mike Gibson

• Plastic Surgery- Rick Milner

• General Surgery- Derek Manus- Paul Hainsworth

• Thoracic surgery- Sion Barnard

• Clinical Oncology- Helen Lucraft- Charles Kelly

• Medical Oncology- Mark Verrill- Ruth Plummer

• Paediatric Oncology- Juliet Hale- Quentin Campbell

Hewson- Alan Craft

• Radiology- Geoff Hide- Chris

Baudoin

• Pathology- Petra Dildey

• Macmillan nurse- Joy Dowd

Page 31: Silent but deadly – how to spot a sarcoma Craig Gerrand Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Freeman Hospital, Newcastle

Thank you