We here present a case of chondrosarcoma of the diaphysis of the femur with extensive involvement of the length of the bone and with the pathological fracture at the mid-shaft level. Total femur replacement was done in this case with a bipolar head and repair of abductors and hip flexors to the implanted prosthesis.
An elderly female in her late 60s presented to the trauma department with sudden onset pain and inability to bear weight on her left lower limb following a trivial slip and fall. The Radiographs revealed a pathological spiral mid-shaft displaced fracture of the femur with an extensive mixed lesion throughout the femur. Magnetic Resonance imaging revealed involvement of more than 90% of the femur with lesion extension into the quadriceps and hamstrings. Histopathology confirmed grade-II conventional chondrosarcoma. Metastatic work-up showed no distant spread. Wide-local resection and total femur endo-prosthetic reconstruction were done. No recurrence or infection was evident at the 18-month follow-up. In elderly non-metastatic pathological fractures, limb salvage with endo-prosthetic reconstruction can be a preferred treatment.
This case is unique in describing a rare presentation of chondrosarcoma of the diaphysis of the femur, which eventually landed in a pathological fracture. The fracture may increase the tumour’s aggressiveness, but wide-margin resection should be the mainstay treatment for primary or recurrent chondrosarcoma, irrespective of pathological fracture.
In well-indicated cases (no distant spread – N0M0 disease), Total Femur Replacement (TFR) is an excellent option for limb salvage in tumours with extensive involvement of the femur.
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