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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bone transport surgery to save limbs in dogs with bone tumors

By Ehrhart, Nicole·Published in Veterinary surgery : VS·2005·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Longitudinal bone transport for treatment of primary bone tumors in dogs: technique description and outcome in 9 dogs.

Species:
dog
OsteosarcomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of nine dogs with primary bone tumors underwent a special surgery called bone transport osteogenesis (BTO) to save their limbs. This technique involved gradually moving a section of bone to fill in the gap left by the tumor, and it showed good results for most dogs, with many regaining excellent limb function. However, two dogs experienced local tumor recurrences that eventually led to limb amputation. Overall, BTO proved to be a promising option for limb salvage in dogs with these types of tumors, offering better long-term outcomes compared to traditional methods.

People also search for: dog bone tumor treatment · limb salvage surgery for dogs · bone transport osteogenesis in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a surgical technique for bone transport osteogenesis (BTO) limb salvage and report outcome in 9 dogs with primary bone tumors. ANIMALS: Nine dogs with spontaneously occurring primary bone tumors. RESULTS: BTO surgery was performed as a primary means of limb salvage in 7 dogs and as a salvage procedure after catastrophic allograft infection and failure in 2 dogs. Mean defect size was 9.5 cm with a mean of 123 days distraction until docking. Mean time from surgery to fixator removal was 205 days. Minimum follow-up was 9 months. There were 2 histologically confirmed local recurrences where although limb function was excellent, eventually resulted in limb amputation. Limb function was good to excellent in all but 2 dogs; 1 was chronically non-weight bearing before BTO surgery because of complications associated with an allograft limb salvage that had been performed previously on the same limb. The cause of lameness in the other dog was undetermined. CONCLUSIONS: BTO limb salvage can be successful in dogs with primary bone tumors. Whereas allograft limb salvage may be simpler from an initial management perspective, BTO has some unique advantages when compared with the allograft technique. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: BTO has an emerging role in limb salvage surgery for dogs with primary bone tumors. BTO provides excellent long-term outcomes in some dogs with primary bone tumors and will likely become increasingly more attractive as technique modifications allow the duration of the treatment to be shortened.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15720593/