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. 2020 Feb 25;4(3):e19.00181. doi: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-19-00181

Table 1.

Quality Scoring Criteria

Diagnosis
Metastatic bone disease as most common in adults
Discusses difference in benign versus malignant lesions
Discusses different diagnoses based on age
Discuses different tools for diagnosis (Radiograph, CT, MRI, bone scan, and biopsy)
Anatomy
Discusses most common bones affected (distal femur, proximal tibia, and proximal humerus)
Discusses regions of the bone affected (intramedullary, cortical, metaphyseal, and epiphyseal)
Sarcomas can be aggressive and extend out of the bone
Treatment
Treatment may involve chemotherapy
Treatment may involve radiation therapy
Treatment may involve surgery
Treatment may be observation
Surgery has two main purposes: tumor resection and reconstruction
Sometimes treatment may be palliative instead of curative
Patients may need stabilization if at risk for pathologic fracture
Discusses surgical adjuvants (argon beam, phenol, and liquid nitrogen)
Surgery may be initially delayed and patient restaged after neoadjuvant therapy
Discusses limb salvage surgery versus amputation
Notes treatment is multidisciplinary (medical oncologist, orthopaedic oncologist, radiation oncologist, musculoskeletal radiologist, musculoskeletal pathologist, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and pain specialist)
Complications
Sarcoma can metastasize to other locations (commonly lungs/other bones)
Lesions in weight-bearing bones may result in pathologic fractures
Lesions may recur even if resected
Patients must be monitored regularly after resection
Surgery in children may result in growth disturbances/limb length inequality
Wounds may become infected
Surgery may require resection of structures such as muscles, vessels, and nerves that limit future function
Score _______/25