Primary retroperitoneal soft-tissue sarcomas
โ Scribed by Yehuda G. Adam; Jan Oland; Ariel Halevy; Renate Reif
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 368 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
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โฆ Synopsis
Of the 98 soft-tissue sarcomas treated between 1973-1978, 12 were retroperitoneal in origin. Fifty percent underwent one to three previous surgical procedures. All patients were operated on. In 75% (nine out of 12), the tumor was completely resected. The operative mortality for total tumor excision was 11 % . There were five liposarcomas, three leiomyosarcomas, two neurofibrosarcomas, and one synovial sarcoma and one unclassified sarcoma. Six of the 12 patients survived five years and three (25%) were alive without evidence of disease at 5 years. Three of the completely resected group received no further treatment; 2/3 survived 5 years; three had postoperative chemotherapy; 3/3 survived; and three others had radiation and chemotherapy subsequent to surgery; all three have died. The two most important prognostic factors were tumor grade and surgical excision. Only one patient with high grade tumor survived. Total surgical excision of the tumor offers the only hope for cure. Aggressive surgery in treating retroperitoneal soft part sarcomas is strongly recommended.
Methods
From 1973-1978, 98 patients with soft-part sarcomas were located in the retropritoneum* During the Same period, a total of 30 patients with primary malignant
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Sarcomas have been diagnosed from ancient times, but the term sarcoma was used for benign as well as malignant tumors until the middle 1800s. The treatment for soft tissue sarcomas was surgery for 2000 years. In the 1970s, multimodality therapy and the TNM system for staging were introduced.