Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin

Abstract Background Due to the high incidence of forefoot ulcerations with associated osteomyelitis, there has been an increased demand for partial ray amputations. In order to ensure complete removal of infected metatarsal bone, a clean margin amount is chosen based on the surgeon’s intraoperative...

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Main Authors: Brent Bernstein, Melody Stouder, Eric Bronfenbrenner, Steven Chen, David Anderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-08-01
Series:Journal of Foot and Ankle Research
Subjects:
MRI
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13047-017-0222-5
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spelling doaj-13c9d599a2784e6b8223f6a210ea5c2a2020-11-24T21:49:15ZengBMCJournal of Foot and Ankle Research1757-11462017-08-0110111110.1186/s13047-017-0222-5Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection marginBrent Bernstein0Melody Stouder1Eric Bronfenbrenner2Steven Chen3David Anderson4Department of Foot and Ankle Surgery, St. Luke’s University Health NetworkDepartment of Foot and Ankle Surgery, St. Luke’s University Health NetworkDepartment of Foot and Ankle Surgery, St. Luke’s University Health NetworkDepartment of Radiology, St. Luke’s University Health NetworkDepartment of Pathology, St. Luke’s University Health NetworkAbstract Background Due to the high incidence of forefoot ulcerations with associated osteomyelitis, there has been an increased demand for partial ray amputations. In order to ensure complete removal of infected metatarsal bone, a clean margin amount is chosen based on the surgeon’s intraoperative visual subjective evaluation. The margin is resected and sent to pathology. Currently the literature shows positive proximal margin rates of 35–40%. The purpose of this study was to reduce the rate of positive proximal margins by effectively resecting all infected bone using pre-operative MRI measurements with an added resection margin. Methods Twenty-four osteomyelitis positive metatarsals were included in this exploratory study. The distance of proximal osteomyelitic extension within the metatarsal was measured on MRI in centimeters. Intra-operatively, the partial ray amputation cut was determined by adding an extra 0.5 cm resection margin to the MRI measurement. At the study’s mid-point, bone histopathology revealed an increase in positive proximal margin rates-so the resection margin was increased to 1 cm. Descriptive outcomes included the mean distance of osteomyelitis propagation, proximal margin rates, as well as diagnostic statistics. Results After removing the specimens with false positive MRI results, the study sample included 21 metatarsals positive for osteomyelitis. A 0.5 cm resection margin proximal to the osteomyelitis resulted in a 50% positive proximal margin rate. After increasing the resection margin to 1 cm, there was found to be an improved positive proximal margin rate of 9%. Based on MRI findings, the mean distance + standard deviation of osteomyelitis propagation along the metatarsal proximally was 1.81 cm + 0.74 cm. The metatarsal specimen was processed by pathology into multiple pieces and compared to MRI, resulting in MRI sensitivity of 67%, specificity of 74%, positive predictive value of 79%, and negative predictive value of 60%. Conclusions By performing a 1 cm resection margin proximal to the metatarsal osteomyelitis the proximal margin rate was reduced to clinically meaningful levels. These preliminary findings support using a 1 cm resection margin when performing any form of metatarsal amputation, to reduce the risk of residual osteomyelitis post-operatively. Trial registration St. Luke’s Hospital, IRB National Protocol ID SLHN2015–112. Date:1–13-16.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13047-017-0222-5OsteomyelitisProximal marginClean marginMetatarsalMRI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brent Bernstein
Melody Stouder
Eric Bronfenbrenner
Steven Chen
David Anderson
spellingShingle Brent Bernstein
Melody Stouder
Eric Bronfenbrenner
Steven Chen
David Anderson
Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
Journal of Foot and Ankle Research
Osteomyelitis
Proximal margin
Clean margin
Metatarsal
MRI
author_facet Brent Bernstein
Melody Stouder
Eric Bronfenbrenner
Steven Chen
David Anderson
author_sort Brent Bernstein
title Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
title_short Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
title_full Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
title_fullStr Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
title_full_unstemmed Correlating pre-operative MRI measurements of metatarsal Osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
title_sort correlating pre-operative mri measurements of metatarsal osteomyelitis with surgical clean margins reveals the need for a one centimeter resection margin
publisher BMC
series Journal of Foot and Ankle Research
issn 1757-1146
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Background Due to the high incidence of forefoot ulcerations with associated osteomyelitis, there has been an increased demand for partial ray amputations. In order to ensure complete removal of infected metatarsal bone, a clean margin amount is chosen based on the surgeon’s intraoperative visual subjective evaluation. The margin is resected and sent to pathology. Currently the literature shows positive proximal margin rates of 35–40%. The purpose of this study was to reduce the rate of positive proximal margins by effectively resecting all infected bone using pre-operative MRI measurements with an added resection margin. Methods Twenty-four osteomyelitis positive metatarsals were included in this exploratory study. The distance of proximal osteomyelitic extension within the metatarsal was measured on MRI in centimeters. Intra-operatively, the partial ray amputation cut was determined by adding an extra 0.5 cm resection margin to the MRI measurement. At the study’s mid-point, bone histopathology revealed an increase in positive proximal margin rates-so the resection margin was increased to 1 cm. Descriptive outcomes included the mean distance of osteomyelitis propagation, proximal margin rates, as well as diagnostic statistics. Results After removing the specimens with false positive MRI results, the study sample included 21 metatarsals positive for osteomyelitis. A 0.5 cm resection margin proximal to the osteomyelitis resulted in a 50% positive proximal margin rate. After increasing the resection margin to 1 cm, there was found to be an improved positive proximal margin rate of 9%. Based on MRI findings, the mean distance + standard deviation of osteomyelitis propagation along the metatarsal proximally was 1.81 cm + 0.74 cm. The metatarsal specimen was processed by pathology into multiple pieces and compared to MRI, resulting in MRI sensitivity of 67%, specificity of 74%, positive predictive value of 79%, and negative predictive value of 60%. Conclusions By performing a 1 cm resection margin proximal to the metatarsal osteomyelitis the proximal margin rate was reduced to clinically meaningful levels. These preliminary findings support using a 1 cm resection margin when performing any form of metatarsal amputation, to reduce the risk of residual osteomyelitis post-operatively. Trial registration St. Luke’s Hospital, IRB National Protocol ID SLHN2015–112. Date:1–13-16.
topic Osteomyelitis
Proximal margin
Clean margin
Metatarsal
MRI
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13047-017-0222-5
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