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    Diagnostic dilemma for an adrenal mass: perivascular epithelioid cell neoplasm versus adrenocortical carcinoma
    Liew, AN ; Naqash, N ; Arachchi, A ; Simpson, I ; Slavin, J (WILEY, 2021-10)
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    A case of benign periosteal chondroma seeding into humeral medullary bone via percutaneous needle biopsy tract
    Learmont, JP ; Powell, G ; Slavin, J ; Facey, M ; Pianta, M (BRITISH INST RADIOLOGY, 2015)
    We report an occurrence of periosteal chondroma seeding into the medulla of humerus via percutaneous needle biopsy tract. To our knowledge, this is the first described case of benign cartilage tumour biopsy tract seeding in the literature. We discuss the clinical, radiological and histological features of periosteal chondroma, as well as the diagnostic challenges associated with distinguishing this entity from periosteal chondrosarcoma. Finally, we briefly discuss the safety of imaging-guided percutaneous needle biopsy and methods to minimize the risk of iatrogenic tumour seeding.
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    Late recovery of renal failure after autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for multiple myeloma: a report of two cases.
    Bigé, N ; Guéry, B ; Delarue, R ; Noël, L-H ; Fakhouri, F (Oxford University Press (OUP), 2009-06)
    Acute renal failure is a frequent feature in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). MM-related renal insufficiency may improve after autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (autoHSCT) even in patients initially requiring dialysis. Herein, we report on two unusual cases of late improvement in renal function occurring over more than 5 years after autoHSCT for MM. Clinicians must be aware that slow and progressive improvement in renal function may occur over years in patients with MM-associated renal failure. Our data underline the need for an aggressive treatment, including autoHSCT, in MM patients presenting with severe renal dysfunction.
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    Importance of preoperative diagnosis for management of patients with suspected retroperitoneal sarcoma
    Gyorki, DE ; Choong, PFM ; Slavin, J ; Henderson, MA (WILEY, 2018-04)
    Soft tissue sarcoma is an umbrella term which encompasses over 60 histological tumour types. Approximately 15% of soft tissue sarcomas arise in the retroperitoneum. This complex group of tumours poses unique management challenges due to their often large size, histological heterogeneity and complexity of anatomical relationships. This review discusses the management of retroperitoneal tumours including the need for preoperative diagnosis, the evidence for neoadjuvant radiotherapy, the role of multivisceral resection and the importance of a multidisciplinary team approach.
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    Diagnostic accuracy of computed tomography-guided biopsy in pathological fractures
    Stokes, CM ; Elsewaisy, O ; Pang, G ; Slavin, JL ; Schlicht, SM ; Choong, PFM (WILEY, 2017-07)
    BACKGROUND: Obtaining a histological diagnosis is essential for appropriate management of pathological fractures. Computed tomography (CT) is an accurate method of obtaining diagnosis for musculoskeletal tumours. We analysed whether diagnostic accuracy was maintained in the evaluation of pathological fractures. METHODS: A retrospective review of 101 consecutive patients presenting to our tertiary musculoskeletal tumour centre with pathological fracture was performed. Patients underwent core needle biopsy under CT guidance of pathological fractures diagnosed by plain radiography and either CT or magnetic resonance imaging. The histopathology of the CT-guided biopsy was compared with the sample obtained from open biopsy or definitive surgery to determine diagnostic accuracy. RESULTS: The mean age at diagnosis was 52 ± 20 years (range: 18-85) in a cohort of 46 men and 55 women. Diagnostic accuracy of CT-guided biopsy was 82.18%. There were 65 malignant and 36 benign tumours with diagnostic accuracy of 86.15% and 80.56%, respectively. The positive predictive value for a malignant tumour was 98.21% whilst it was 93.1% for benign tumours. The femur (53 cases) and humerus (25 cases) were the commonest bones fractured. The most frequent diagnoses were metastasis (20.79%), giant cell tumour (17.82%), osteosarcoma (9.90%) and myeloma (9.90%). There were no complications of CT-guided biopsy. CONCLUSION: Pathological fracture does not confound the diagnosis of musculoskeletal tumours. CT-guided biopsy is an accurate diagnostic tool in the evaluation of pathological fractures. Final diagnosis and management should be made in the context of appropriate anatomical and functional imaging using a multidisciplinary approach.
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    Predicting the prognosis of undifferentiated pleomorphic soft tissue sarcoma: a 20-year experience of 266 cases
    Vodanovich, DA ; Spelman, T ; May, D ; Slavin, J ; Choong, PFM (WILEY, 2019-09)
    BACKGROUND: Undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (UPS) is a rare malignant tumour of mesenchymal origin, which was conceived following re-classification of malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH). The objective of this study is to determine prognostic factors for the outcome of UPS, following multi-modal treatment. METHODS: Data of UPS tumours from 1996 to 2016 were collected, totalling 266 unique UPS patients. Median follow-up was 7.8 years. All tumours were retrospectively analysed for prognostic factors of the disease, including local recurrence (LR) and metastatic disease (MD) at diagnosis, tumour size, grade, location and depth, patient age, adjuvant therapy and surgical margin. Overall survival (OS), post-treatment LR and metastatic-free survival were assessed as outcomes. RESULTS: The 5- and 10-year OS rates for all ages were 60% and 48%, respectively, with a median survival time of 10.1 years. Multivariate analysis revealed that the adverse prognostic factors associated with decreased OS were older age (P < 0.001; hazard ratio 1.03) and MD at diagnosis (P = 0.001; 2.89), with upper extremity tumours being favourable (P = 0.043; 2.30). Poor prognosis for post-operative LR was associated with older age (P = 0.046; 1.03) and positive surgical margins (P = 0.028; 2.68). Increased post-treatment MD was seen in patients with large tumours (5-9 cm (P < 0.001; 4.42), ≥10 cm (P < 0.001; 6.80)) and MD at diagnosis (P < 0.001; 3.99), adjuvant therapy was favourable, shown to reduce MD (P < 0.001; 0.34). CONCLUSIONS: UPS is a high-grade soft tissue sarcoma, for which surgery striving for negative margins, with radiotherapy, is the treatment of choice. Older age, lower extremity location, MD at presentation, large size and positive surgical margins, were unfavourable.
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    Dual-energy contrast-enhanced CT to evaluate scaphoid osteonecrosis with surgical correlation
    Pianta, M ; McCombe, D ; Slavin, J ; Hendry, S ; Perera, W (WILEY, 2019-02)
    To evaluate the validity of contrast enhanced dual energy CT using a lung perfusion algorithm in assessing for post-traumatic scaphoid proximal pole avascular necrosis. From Aug 2013 to Aug 2016, 18 patients (19 wrists, 16 males, 2 females, mean age 28 years) were assessed as high-risk for proximal pole scaphoid avascular necrosis by a single surgeon following a scaphoid fracture and were referred for contrast-enhanced dual energy CT. 8 wrists had specimens sent for correlative histological analysis and 11 were correlated with operative notes. Eight surgical specimens were sent to histology and showed a 100% correlation (8/8) with the DECT findings. The remaining 11 wrists that did not have a specimen sent had in-surgery findings that also correlated with DECT. A single case was discrepant (1/11) due to presence of an intra-osseous ganglion, which was reported as osteonecrosis on CT, but considered viable at surgery. No case was called viable on CT that proved to be necrotic at either surgery or histologically. Contrast-enhanced dual energy CT using a perfusion algorithm is an innovative and promising method in evaluating viability of the post-trauma proximal pole of scaphoid.
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    Clinical, radiological and pathological outcomes following treatment of primary giant cell tumour of bone with Denosumab
    Murphy, B ; Vodanovich, D ; Spelman, T ; Gullifer, J ; Slavin, J ; Powell, G ; Pang, G ; Choong, P (WILEY, 2020-12)
    BACKGROUND: Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTOB) is a relatively uncommon, benign, but locally aggressive neoplasm. Denosumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody with inhibitory effects on receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand that has shown early promise as a possible treatment adjuvant for GCTB. However, much is still unknown about its current indications, long-term effects, the potential risk for rapid relapse and its involvement in sarcomatous transformation. METHODS: We analysed the outcomes of 154 patients with GCTOB. We assessed clinical outcomes via local recurrence free-survival, metastatic free-survival and sarcomatous transformation between those treated without Denosumab and those with neo-adjuvant Denosumab. Our radiological and pathological outcomes were assessed through independent specialist reviews. RESULTS: Four (19.0%) patients of the neo-adjuvant group had local recurrence of disease versus 16 (12.0%) patients in the surgery alone group; this results in a 3.62 times increased likelihood of developing local recurrence (P = 0.030). The median time to local recurrence was shorter for the neo-adjuvant group (421.5 days versus 788.5 days) (P = 0.01). There was no difference between Denosumab and the surgery groups in terms of metastatic disease (P = 0.45). Two patients in our cohort with GCTOB developed sarcomatous transformation, both were treated with Denosumab. CONCLUSION: Our use of Denosumab tended to be for those patients who had surgically difficult tumours to halt the progression and allow easier resections. Of concern we noted a trend towards increasing recurrence rates with the potential risk for rapid relapse. Furthermore, two cases experienced sarcomatous transformation, which is a growing area of concern within the literature.
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    Cutaneous leiomyosarcoma: dermal and subcutaneous
    Wong, GN ; Webb, A ; Gyorki, D ; McCormack, C ; Tran, P ; Ngan, SY ; Slavin, J ; Henderson, MA (WILEY, 2020-08)
    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Leiomyosarcoma of skin (LMS) can be sub-classified on pathology appearances as Dermal or Subcutaneous. The aim of this study was to provide treatment recommendations for these uncommon tumours. METHODS: A retrospective review of all patients with dermal and subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma managed at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Australia from January 2003 to December 2018 was performed. Eighty-three patients were identified (64 dermal leiomyosarcoma, 19 subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma). RESULTS: Subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma were larger (median size 14 mm dermal, 49 mm subcutaneous, P = 0.01). No patient with a dermal leiomyosarcoma developed metastatic disease compared to 4 of the 19 subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma (5-year overall survivals, 98% and 88%, respectively, P = 0.03). The most common site of metastasis was to the lung. No difference in risk of local recurrence was apparent (5-year recurrence-free survivals were 85% and 78%, respectively, P = 0.17). Adjuvant radiotherapy was used in 16 (25%) dermal leiomyosarcoma patients and 13 (68%) subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma patients (P < 0.001). Local recurrence was uncommon in both tumour subtypes when patients received definitive surgical excision (minimum histological margins of 10 mm as per institutional protocol) regardless of whether radiotherapy was used. The 5-year local recurrence-free survival for dermal leiomyosarcoma treated with radiotherapy was 93% versus 83% without radiotherapy (P = 0.7) and for subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma was 69% and 100%, respectively (P = 0.9). CONCLUSIONS: Dermal leiomyosarcoma have an excellent prognosis, particularly after definitive surgical excision with margins of at least 10 mm. Subcutaneous leiomyosarcoma has poorer outcomes and should be managed by wider excision and considered for adjuvant radiotherapy.
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    Correlation between percutaneous biopsy and final histopathology for retroperitoneal sarcoma: a single-centre study
    Young, R ; Snow, H ; Hendry, S ; Mitchell, C ; Slavin, J ; Schlicht, S ; Na, L ; Hofman, MS ; Gyorki, DE (WILEY, 2020-04)
    BACKGROUND: Retroperitoneal sarcomas are rare soft tissue tumours accounting for 10-15% of soft tissue sarcomas. Patient prognosis and treatment recommendations (including extent of surgery and neoadjuvant strategies) are determined by the pre-operative histopathological subtype and grade obtained from biopsy and thus it is important to understand the accuracy of biopsy in retroperitoneal masses. METHODS: This study presents a case series of primary retroperitoneal sarcomas managed at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre (PMCC) between 2008 and 2019. Statistical analyses were performed to determine correlation between histopathology from percutaneous biopsy and surgical excision. RESULTS: A total of 117 patients who underwent percutaneous core biopsy and surgical excision of retroperitoneal sarcoma were included. Diagnostic accuracy varied with histopathological diagnosis, but overall precise concordance between biopsy and final histopathology was seen in 61% (κ = 0.57). Biopsy was most sensitive for identifying well-differentiated liposarcoma (WDLPS) (sensitivity 85%, 95% CI 0.06-0.96) and leiomyosarcoma (sensitivity 81%, 95% CI 0.54-0.96) and was least sensitive for identifying de-differentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS) (sensitivity 40%, 95% CI 0.25-0.56). Overall agreement between biopsy and final histopathology increased with use of PET/CT scan pre-biopsy and with use of fluorescence in situ hybridisation testing on biopsy, however, neither test improved recognition of de-differentiated components within WD/DDLPS on core biopsy. CONCLUSIONS: Pre-operative biopsy is important for clinical decision making in the treatment of retroperitoneal sarcoma. A significant portion of patients with a WDLPS will have a de-differentiated component identified at the time of resection that was not identified on initial biopsy.