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The Importance of Awaiting Biopsy Results in Solitary Pathological Proximal Femoral Fractures Do We Need to Biopsy Solitary Pathological Fractures?

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ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-023-13931-4

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This study aimed to describe the diagnostic accuracy, morbidity, and sarcoma incidence of biopsy results in patients with pathological proximal femoral fractures. The study found that biopsy can differentiate between sarcoma and non-sarcoma, but it delays surgery time, results can be inconclusive or false, and it increases the risk of fractures.
Background. The optimal surgical treatment for patients presenting with (impending and complete) pathological proximal femoral fractures is predicated on prognosis. Guidelines recommend a preoperative biopsy to exclude sarcomas, however no evidence confirms a benefit. Objective. This study aimed to describe the diagnostic accuracy, morbidity and sarcoma incidence of biopsy results in these patients. Material and Methods. All patients (n = 153) presenting with pathological proximal femoral fractures between 2000 and 2019 were retrospectively evaluated. Patients after inadvertent surgery (n = 25) were excluded. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate the accuracy and morbidity of diagnostic biopsies. Results. Of 112/ 128 patients who underwent biopsy, nine (8%) biopsies were unreliable either due to being inconclusive (n = 5) or because the diagnosis changed after resection (n = 4). Of impending fractures, 32% fractured following needle core biopsy. Median time from diagnosis to surgery was 30 days (interquartile range 21-46). The overall biopsy positive predictive value (PPV) to differentiate between sarcoma and non-sarcoma was 1.00 (95% confidence interval [ CI] 0.88-1.00). In patients with a previous malignancy (n = 24), biopsy (n = 23) identified the diagnosis in 83% (PPV 0.91, 95% CI 0.71-0.99), of whom five (24%) patients had a new diagnosis. In patients without a history of cancer (n = 61), final diagnosis included carcinomas (n = 24, 39.3%), sarcomas (n = 24, 39.3%), or hematological malignancies (n = 13, 21.3%). Biopsy (n = 58) correctly identified the diagnosis in 66% of patients (PPV 0.80, 95% CI 0.67-0.90). Conclusion. This study confirms the importance of a preoperative biopsy in solitary pathological proximal femoral fractures due to the risk of sarcoma in patients with and without a history of cancer. However, biopsy delays the time to definite surgery, results can be inconclusive or false, and it risks completion of impending fractures.

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