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High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy

BACKGROUND: The risk of metastasis and the survival in patients with primary extremity soft tissue sarcomas is worse when tumour size is large and the grade of malignancy is high. Such tumours may receive chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy (RTX) for optimising local control. Irradiation can eithe...

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Autores principales: Leidinger, Benedikt, Heyse, Thomas, Schuck, Andreas, Buerger, Horst, Mommsen, Philipp, Bruening, Thomas, Fuchs, Susanne, Gosheger, Georg
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1550254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16780601
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-160
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author Leidinger, Benedikt
Heyse, Thomas
Schuck, Andreas
Buerger, Horst
Mommsen, Philipp
Bruening, Thomas
Fuchs, Susanne
Gosheger, Georg
author_facet Leidinger, Benedikt
Heyse, Thomas
Schuck, Andreas
Buerger, Horst
Mommsen, Philipp
Bruening, Thomas
Fuchs, Susanne
Gosheger, Georg
author_sort Leidinger, Benedikt
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The risk of metastasis and the survival in patients with primary extremity soft tissue sarcomas is worse when tumour size is large and the grade of malignancy is high. Such tumours may receive chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy (RTX) for optimising local control. Irradiation can either be applied preoperatively or after tumour resection. The question arises if the kind of RTX in the absence of chemotherapy influences the outcome concerning local control, metastatic disease, survival and complications. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the clinical outcome of 233 patients with a primary extremity soft tissue sarcoma treated between 1990 – 2000 with a mean follow-up of 35.8 (4–120) months in our institute. 41 patients had high grade, deep and large tumours (>8 cm), an AJCC stage III (no evidence of metastasis prior to treatment) and were treated with limb salvage surgery and irradiation but stayed without additional chemotherapy. Two groups of patients were compared: the first group received postoperative RTX after tumour resection (n = 33); the second group was treated with preoperative RTX (n = 8). Both groups did not differ concerning clinical parameters. We analysed primary and secondary outcomes. RESULTS: 56% (23/41) of the population developed metastatic disease, 24% (10/41) local recurrence. The risk of metastasis was higher in the group with preoperative irradiation (p = 0.046). The overall (p = 0.0248) and relapse free survival (p = 0.104) were worse in this group. The delay to tumour resection amounted 8 weeks on average in the preoperative group. Local control was not different (p = 0.38) in both study groups. Wound infections and other combined therapy related complications were equally distributed (p = 0.22). CONCLUSION: Without chemotherapy there remains a high risk of metastasis in AJCC grade 3 patients. In high risk patients treated without chemotherapy the elapsed time to tumour resection after preoperative radiation might contribute to the development of metastasis. This outcome may support the thesis that a combination of RTX and offensive multimodal treatment protocols is advantageous in such a subset of patients
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spelling pubmed-15502542006-08-17 High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy Leidinger, Benedikt Heyse, Thomas Schuck, Andreas Buerger, Horst Mommsen, Philipp Bruening, Thomas Fuchs, Susanne Gosheger, Georg BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: The risk of metastasis and the survival in patients with primary extremity soft tissue sarcomas is worse when tumour size is large and the grade of malignancy is high. Such tumours may receive chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy (RTX) for optimising local control. Irradiation can either be applied preoperatively or after tumour resection. The question arises if the kind of RTX in the absence of chemotherapy influences the outcome concerning local control, metastatic disease, survival and complications. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the clinical outcome of 233 patients with a primary extremity soft tissue sarcoma treated between 1990 – 2000 with a mean follow-up of 35.8 (4–120) months in our institute. 41 patients had high grade, deep and large tumours (>8 cm), an AJCC stage III (no evidence of metastasis prior to treatment) and were treated with limb salvage surgery and irradiation but stayed without additional chemotherapy. Two groups of patients were compared: the first group received postoperative RTX after tumour resection (n = 33); the second group was treated with preoperative RTX (n = 8). Both groups did not differ concerning clinical parameters. We analysed primary and secondary outcomes. RESULTS: 56% (23/41) of the population developed metastatic disease, 24% (10/41) local recurrence. The risk of metastasis was higher in the group with preoperative irradiation (p = 0.046). The overall (p = 0.0248) and relapse free survival (p = 0.104) were worse in this group. The delay to tumour resection amounted 8 weeks on average in the preoperative group. Local control was not different (p = 0.38) in both study groups. Wound infections and other combined therapy related complications were equally distributed (p = 0.22). CONCLUSION: Without chemotherapy there remains a high risk of metastasis in AJCC grade 3 patients. In high risk patients treated without chemotherapy the elapsed time to tumour resection after preoperative radiation might contribute to the development of metastasis. This outcome may support the thesis that a combination of RTX and offensive multimodal treatment protocols is advantageous in such a subset of patients BioMed Central 2006-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC1550254/ /pubmed/16780601 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-160 Text en Copyright © 2006 Leidinger et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Leidinger, Benedikt
Heyse, Thomas
Schuck, Andreas
Buerger, Horst
Mommsen, Philipp
Bruening, Thomas
Fuchs, Susanne
Gosheger, Georg
High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title_full High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title_fullStr High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title_full_unstemmed High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title_short High incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
title_sort high incidence of metastatic disease in primary high grade and large extremity soft tissue sarcomas treated without chemotherapy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1550254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16780601
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-160
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