We evaluated the results of reconstruction of a skeletal defect with use
of a vascularized bone graft from the iliac crest or fibula in 160 patients
who had been managed consecutively between 1979 and 1989. The indications
for the procedure were a skeletal defect including non-union, resulting
from resection of a tumor; traumatic bone loss; osteomyelitis; or a
congenital anomaly. The average duration of follow-up was forty-two months
(range, twelve to 112 months). For the entire series, the rate of union
after the primary procedure was 61 per cent and the over-all rate at the
latest follow-up examination (including the patients who had a secondary
procedure) was 81 per cent. In a subgroup of seventy-six patients who had
union after the primary procedure and did not have additional treatment,
the average interval until union was six months and the average interval
until full activity was sixteen months. The results were more favorable for
the patients who had had reconstruction for resection of a tumor (of
sixty-nine patients, fifty-six had union), for a congenital anomaly (of six
patients, five had union), or for a non-union without infection (of
twenty-five patients, twenty-three had union). The results were less
satisfactory for patients who had had the reconstruction for bone loss due
to osteomyelitis (of sixty patients, forty-six had union). Our data suggest
that vascularized bone transfer for the reconstruction of large skeletal
defects is a valuable procedure in appropriately selected patients.