Journal of Bone Oncology (Mar 2016)

The epidemiological and clinical features of primary giant cell tumor around the knee: A report from the multicenter retrospective study in china

  • Fengsong Lin,
  • Yongcheng Hu,
  • Liming Zhao,
  • Huilin Zhang,
  • Xiuchun Yu,
  • Zhen Wang,
  • Zhaoming Ye,
  • Sujia Wu,
  • Shibing Guo,
  • Guochuan Zhang,
  • Jinghua Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbo.2016.02.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 38 – 42

Abstract

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Objectives: We aimed to determine the demographic characteristics of giant cell tumor around the knee in China. Methods: Between March 2000 and June 2014, patients with primary giant cell tumor around the knee were recruited from 6 institutions located in different regions of China, and were reviewed retrospectively the clinical features according to gender and age. Results: 334 qualified patients were included in this study. The sex ratio was 1.14:1 (178/156), with mean ages of 36.9 years in men and 33.1 years in women, constituting a significant difference (P=0.007). The prevalence of pathological fracture was 32.9% overall (28.7% in men and 37.8% in women). The prevalence of simple fracture was significantly higher in women (26.3%) than in men (15.2%), P=0.042. Tumor location and staging did not differ significantly according to sex (P>0.05). However, comparing with >40 years old, those patients aged ≤40 were more likely to have a right knee tumor (56.7% vs. 44.7%, P=0.042), less likely to have Enneking stage 3 disease (18.6% vs. 35.0%, P=0.005), and less likely to have both soft-tissue extension and a mass (18.6% vs. 34.0%, P=0.009). Conclusions: Giant cell tumor around the knee was more common in men than in women, although female patients were younger on average. Further, cases among patients ≤40 years old were observed to be milder than cases among older patients. The results suggest that efficient treatment and preservation of function should both be valued for young patients with giant cell tumor around the knee.

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