email:   Dr. Malawer
email:   info@sarcoma.org
 
office:   202-877-3970
toll-free:   877-66-ORTHO
fax:   202-877-8959

Washington Hospital Center
110 Irving St. NW, C2173
Washington, DC 20010
 
 


The shoulder girdle, which consists of the scapula, proximal humerus, clavicle and surrounding musculature, is the second-most common site for sarcomas.

In the past, many sarcomas involving the shoulder girdle were treated with forequarter amputations. However, with improvements in chemotherapy and advances in surgical techniques, we are now able to perform limb-sparing surgeries for approximately 95% of all patients with shoulder girdle tumors. Essentially normal function of the hand, forearm and wrist, as well as a stable shoulder and elbow flexion can be retained.

We pioneered the first classification system for resections of shoulder tumors and the first "constrained" or "snap-fit" scapular prosthesis for endoprosthetic reconstruction.


Patient Videos

Interview with a patient, discussing her experience with her surgical procedure, 4 years after a proximal humerus resection

A patient demonstrating the functionality of his shoulder girdle, 12 years after a proximal scapula replacement

Surgical Videos

Technique of proximal humerus resection and reconstruction

Flash Animations
Surgical techniques: review of endoprosthetic reconstruction
Patient videos: Videos of patients who have undergone surgery at our center

Related Publications


Wittig JC, Bickels J, Wodajo FM, Kellar-Graney KL, Malawer MM. Constrained Total Scapula Reconstruction after Resection of a High-Grade Sarcoma. Clinical Orthopedics and Related Research, 397: 143-155, April 2002.

Patients with high-grade sarcomas arising from the scapula or periscapular soft tissues traditionally have been treated with either a total scapulectomy or a wide, en bloc, extraarticular scapular resection, termed the Tikhoff-Linberg resection. The major challenge after such resections is to restore shoulder girdle stability while preserving a functional hand and elbow. The current authors describe three patients who had an extraarticular, total scapula resection (modified Tikhoff-Linberg) for a high-grade sarcoma. Each patient had reconstruction with a constrained (rotator cuff-substituting) total scapula prosthesis in an effort to optimally restore the normal muscle force couples of both glenohumeral and scapulothoracic mechanisms. At latest followup, the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society functional score was 24 to 27 of 30 (80%-90%). All patients had a stable, painless shoulder and functional hand and elbow. Forward flexion and abduction ranged from 25 degrees to 40 degrees. Glenohumeral rotation (internal rotation, T6; external rotation -10 degrees) below shoulder level, shoulder extension, and adduction were preserved. Protraction, retraction, elevation, and abduction of the scapula were restored and contributed to shoulder motion and upper extremity stabilization. There were no complications. Total scapula reconstruction with a constrained total scapula prosthesis is a safe and reliable method for reconstructing the shoulder girdle after resection of select high-grade sarcomas. The authors emphasize the clinical indications, prosthetic design, surgical technique, and early functional results.

DOWNLOAD AS PDF FILE (requires Adobe Reader)


Wodajo FM, Bickels J, Wittig JC, Kellar-Graney K, Kollender Y, Meller I, Malawer MM. Reconstruction with scapular endoprosthesis provides superior results after total scapular resection: Surgical technique and comparison to patients without endoprosthetic reconstruction.

DOWNLOAD POSTER AS PDF FILE (requires Adobe Reader)

Malawer MM. Overview of resections around the shoulder girdle: anatomy, surgical considerations and classification. From Musculoskeletal Cancer Surgery (2001), Ch. 9. Kluwer Academic Publishers.

DOWNLOAD CHAPTER AS PDF FILE (requires Adobe Reader)

Malawer MM. Proximal humerus resection. The Tikhoff-Linberg procedure and its modifications. From Musculoskeletal Cancer Surgery (2001), Ch. 33. Kluwer Academic Publishers.

DOWNLOAD CHAPTER AS PDF FILE (requires Adobe Reader)

Malawer MM, Rubert C. Scapulectomy. From Musculoskeletal Cancer Surgery (2001), Ch. 34. Kluwer Academic Publishers.

DOWNLOAD CHAPTER AS PDF FILE (requires Adobe Reader)