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Unplanned Excision of Soft Tissue Sarcoma Results...
Journal article

Unplanned Excision of Soft Tissue Sarcoma Results in Increased Rates of Local Recurrence Despite Full Further Oncological Treatment

Abstract

BackgroundUnplanned excision of soft tissue sarcoma (STS) accounts for up to 40% of all initial operations for STS and is undertaken when the mass is presumed to be benign. The effect this has on outcome has never been fully established.MethodsPatients with extremity or trunk STS between 2001 and 2005 who were treated by an initial inadvertent operation and then referred immediately to our unit were identified. Outcomes were compared with a control group of patients with STS who were stage-matched and had been treated conventionally by core biopsy and definitive surgery. Endpoints were local recurrence, distant metastases and sarcoma-specific survival.Results134 patients who had undergone unplanned excision of STS were identified. One hundred twenty-one underwent further re-excision, and 51 (48%) of these patients had residual tumour identified after surgical re-excision. Two hundred nine stage-matched controls were identified who were treated conventionally. Median follow-up was 51.6 months. Local recurrence rates were considerably higher in the study group (23.8 vs. 11%, p = 0.0016), despite the control group having more stage 3 tumours. When the tumours were matched by stage, an increase in local recurrence was seen across all stages but was most pronounced for stage 3 tumours (37.5 vs. 14.2%, p = 0.005). Metastasis-free and sarcoma-specific survival were also significantly increased for stage 3 tumours.ConclusionUnplanned initial excision of extremity soft tissue sarcoma may compromise long-term local control of extremity STS despite full further oncological management.

Authors

Qureshi YA; Huddy JR; Miller JD; Strauss DC; Thomas JM; Hayes AJ

Journal

Annals of Surgical Oncology, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 871–877

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2012

DOI

10.1245/s10434-011-1876-z

ISSN

1068-9265

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