Per our ortho onc guy, there was ONE total Ortho onc fellow this last year. There are plenty of programs, but none fill. This is due to a few things from his opinion:
1. Lowest paying of all ortho specialties
2. over worked underpaid life style.
3. can be frustrating...because of the paucity of soft tissue tumors, large studies are almost impossible, so many treatment decisions are made from extrapolating from other types of tumors or by tradition alone. it can also be frustrating because treatment depends VERY much on where you are, again because of tradition (certain places always use radiation for certain tumors, others never do, etc)
4. again, because of paucity of tumors, its hard to get the experience needed. the other day, i scrubbed a case in which our ortho onc guy told me there would be 3 of these types of tumors in the nation this year, and this was one of them.
The nice thing about ortho onc is that the community is so small, they all know eachother, and consult each other. On that case (of one in three in the nation), he was able to call up the surgeons who had done a few before. Also, because virtually no one is going into ortho onc, the need is extremely great. We get referral cases all the time from community orthos that biopsied when they shouldn't have...costing the patient an extremity, when they could have had a tumor resection. And as a final good/bad thing, it is very academic. Many chairmen/women are onc's, if thats what you want to end up doing.
good luck
sscooterguy