Surgical Treatment for Patients With Hemophilic Pseudotumor-Related Femoral Fracture: A Retrospective Study
Abstract Purpose: Hemophilic pseudotumor (HPT)-related fracture is a rare but severe complication in patients with HPTs. These fractures often occur in femurs. There is no consensus on the standard surgical protocol for HPT-related femoral fracture. The aim of this retrospective study is to evaluate the outcome of these patients treated with surgical interventions.Methods: Ten patients with HPT-related femoral fractures who were treated with 12 surgical procedures in our hospital from Jan 2014 to April 2020 were retrospectively evaluated. Demographic data, fracture location, complications after operation and follow-up outcomes were recorded and analyzed with a mean follow-up period of 39.7 months.Results: Bone union was observed in five patients, an adequate callus was visible in two patients, and three patients underwent amputation. Both of 2 patients with closed reduction external fixation (CREF) had pin infection. Nonunion combined with external fixation (EF) failure occurred in one of whom, and the plate was broken after open reduction internal fixation. Three patients underwent autogenous or allogeneic cortical strut grafting. Three patients had HPT recurrence.Conclusion: It is necessary to perform surgery in patients with HPT-related femoral fractures. Surgical treatments must take both fracture stabilization and HPT resection into account. Internal fixation is preferable and EF should be dismissed unless for the purpose of temporary fixation. If the HPT erodes more than one-third of the bone diameter, struct grafts are necessary for mechanical stability. Amputation is a proper curative method in certain situations.