Shiloni E, Szold A, White D E, Freund H R
Department of Surgery, Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
J Surg Oncol. 1993 Jul;53(3):197-203. doi: 10.1002/jso.2930530315.
Between 1968 and 1988 we treated 41 patients with high-grade soft tissue retroperitoneal sarcomas. Clinical, pathological, and treatment variables were analyzed retrospectively with regard to their influence on recurrence rate and mortality. The actuarial 5-year median survival for the whole group was 48 months, with 33% of the patients surviving 10 years. Gender, clinical presentation, tumor size, and histological types did not predict outcome by multivariate analysis. Complete tumor resection was performed in 56% of the patients, but at 10 years after surgery only 10% of those patients remained disease free. Patients were classified into four groups according to the most aggressive surgical procedure employed: (1) total gross tumor resection; (2) subtotal resection, in which the major tumor bulk was excised (often with adjacent organs), but in which obvious residual disease remained; (3) palliative resection, in which minimal tumor resection was performed in order to alleviate symptoms; and (4) exploration only. Patients who were either explored and had no tumor removed or who underwent a palliative resection had a similarly poor prognosis, with a median survival of 12 and 20 months, respectively. To our surprise, patients after total resection had no survival benefit over patients who had undergone subtotal resection. However, both groups together had a significantly longer median survival of 241 months compared to the median survival of the patients with either no resection or only palliative resection (P < 0.02). The addition of chemotherapy or radiation therapy failed to show any advantage in this series. We claim from our experience that the impossibility of performing a complete resection should not prevent attempts at aggressive subtotal tumor excision, including the removal of adjacent organs, since this aggressive surgical approach may prolong survival significantly.