Literature DB >> 26929181

Outcomes of unplanned sarcoma excision: impact of residual disease.

Chris Charoenlap1,2, Jungo Imanishi1, Takaaki Tanaka1, John Slavin3, Samuel Y Ngan4,5, Sarat Chander4,5, Michelle Maree Dowsey1,6, Chatar Goyal1, Peter F M Choong1,5,6.   

Abstract

This study aimed to compare the oncological results between unplanned excision (UE) and planned excision (PE) of malignant soft tissue tumor and to examine the impact of residual tumor (ReT) after UE. Nonmetastatic soft tissue sarcomas surgically treated in 1996-2012 were included in this study. Disease-specific survival (DSS), metastasis-free survival (MFS), and local-recurrence-free survival (LRFS) were stratified according to the tumor location and American Joint Committee on Cancer Classification 7th edition stage. Independent prognostic parameters were identified by Cox proportional hazard models. Two-hundred and ninety PEs and 161 UEs were identified. Significant difference in oncological outcome was observed only for LRFS probability of retroperitoneal sarcomas (5-year LRFS: 33.0% [UE] vs. 71.0% [PE], P = 0.018). Among the 142 UEs of extremity and trunk, ReT in re-excision specimen were found in 75 cases (53%). UEs with ReT had significantly lower survival probabilities and a higher amputation rate than UEs without ReT (5-year DSS: 68.8% vs. 92%, P < 0.001; MFS: 56.1% vs. 90.9%, P < 0.001; LRFS: 75.8% vs. 98.4%, P = <0.001; amputation rate 18.5% vs. 1.8%, P = 0.003). The presence of ReT was an independent poor prognostic predictor for DSS, MFS, and LRFS with hazard ratios of 2.02 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.25-3.26), 1.62 (95% CI, 1.05-2.51) and 1.94 (95% CI, 1.05-3.59), respectively. Soft tissue sarcomas should be treated in specialized centers and UE should be avoided because of its detrimental effect especially when ReT remains after UE.
© 2016 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Neoplasm staging; prognosis; residual neoplasm; sarcoma mortality; sarcoma surgery; soft tissue sarcoma; treatment outcome

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26929181      PMCID: PMC4924354          DOI: 10.1002/cam4.615

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Med        ISSN: 2045-7634            Impact factor:   4.452


Introduction

Sarcomas are rare malignancies that arise from mesenchymal cells, which occur with an incidence of 2–4 per 100,000 population. It is now accepted that best practice for the management of these tumors belongs in a multidisciplinary setting where the convergence of experience and expertise maximizes the potential for cure or palliation. Despite the widespread availability of treatment guidelines, misdiagnosis and improper surgery still occur among referred sarcomas. Alarmingly, between 37% and 71% of soft tissue sarcomas are subjected to inadvertent surgery prior to referral to specialized tumor centers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Unplanned sarcoma excision has been variously described in the literatures 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. This type of surgery refers to the removal of a mass without prior knowledge of the malignant nature of the tumor and also without the application of planned oncologic margins appropriate for a sarcoma. When referred to a tumor center, re‐excision after unplanned surgery is routinely performed to mitigate the possibility of residual tumor in the previous surgical area 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12. In contrast, a planned excision of sarcoma follows appropriate local and systemic staging that includes at least anatomic imaging of the affected part with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a chest scan, and tissue biopsy. These investigations are then interrogated by a multidisciplinary team of sarcoma specialists where a consensus opinion is made about the appropriateness of treatment 11. The outcomes of previously unplanned surgery and the discrepancy between this and the outcomes of planned surgery remain controversial. Authors have reported poor, no difference, or even preferable outcomes in unplanned excision group 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 12. A key confounder to comparison has been the variations in tumor demographics among these papers. Moreover, unplanned excision patients were frequently treated as a whole group rather than stratified by cancer stage because of the limited numbers. Importantly, stratifying data by residual disease, which is an important outcome predictor, was not always done despite its occurrence in 18–72% of the re‐resection specimen 12, 13, 14, 15. The aims of this study were to compare the oncological outcome between planned and unplanned excision of soft tissue sarcoma patients after definitive surgery within the same cancer stage, and to clarify the influence of residual disease on oncologic outcomes. The study population consisted of patients with localized sarcoma that was appropriate for treatment with curative intent.

Materials and Methods

Study design

St. Vincent's Hospital Melbourne and Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre East Melbourne, where this study was conducted, are metropolitan specialist hospitals which form the conjoint sarcoma service, a national teritary referral center for sarcoma care. The research protocol was approved by the institutional human research ethics committee (HREC number: QA 012/15). Patients meeting the inclusion criteria below were identified from a prospectively compiled institutional connective tissue tumor database. All patient medical records, imaging and pathological reports were reviewed and updated with patient status information from patient records at hospitals and the Cancer Council of Victoria, which is a not‐for‐profit organization aiming to reduce the impact of cancer and has access to death information of all the registered sarcoma patients.

Inclusion criteria and definition of unplanned excision

The inclusion criteria were soft tissue sarcomas surgically treated in 1996–2012, no lymph node or distant metastasis prior to definitive resection, and at least a 2‐year follow‐up period if the absence of oncological event. Unplanned excision (UE) was defined as the removal of sarcoma without concern of an appropriate surgical margin due to a mistaken diagnosis of benign disease or the absence of histopathological confirmation, including inappropriate partial resection or open biopsy outside using wrong biopsy tract or having widespread contamination that would be otherwise preventable. Patients, who had no prior surgery or were referred after appropriate biopsy, or who underwent primary resection in our institution were allocated to the planned excision (PE) group. Residual tumor (ReT) was declared if sarcoma tissue was microscopically found in the re‐excision specimen of a UE case.

Definition of other variables in this study

Age was determined as the age of patient at the diagnosis date. Tumor size was determined by measuring the largest diameter of tumor mass on any axis from magnetic resonance images at the first presentation before preoperative radiotherapy. If the imaging was unavailable for the UE group, the pathological reports of the first operation were used instead. Tumor grade was determined according to the Fédération Nationale des Centers de Lutte le Cancer (FNCLCC) grading system 16. Patients were staged using the AJCC (American Joint Committee on Cancer) classification 7th edition 17. Tumors superficial to the deep fascia were classified as superficial, and those deep to or engaged in the deep fascia were classified as deep. Surgical margin were classified according to the Enneking system 18. A microscopically positive margin was declared if surgical margin was identified at the inked margin of definitive resection specimen. In this study, all cases with microscopically positive margin were categorized as “intralesional margin,” regardless of intra‐operative or macroscopic findings. The disease‐specific survival (DSS) time was calculated from the date of diagnosis to the date of death from disease. Mortality from other causes was censored. Metastasis‐free survival (MFS) time and local‐recurrence‐free survival (LRFS) time were counted from the date of definitive surgery to the date that distant metastasis at any site and recurrences at or near primary tumor location were recorded, respectively. Local recurrence and distant metastasis were confirmed by biopsy or resection unless the recurrence or metastasis was multiple or clinically obvious. The amputation rate was calculated by dividing the number of eventually amputated cases, including cases that initially underwent limb‐salvage surgery but ultimately required amputation, by the number of cases in each category.

Treatment and follow‐up protocol at our sarcoma service

Radiotherapy consisted of 50.4 Gy delivered by external beam in divided doses over 28 sessions was applied to the majority of soft tissue sarcoma cases, whether UE or PE, except for certain small low‐grade cases or those in which amputation was planned at the first presentation. The indication of chemotherapy was determined at the institutional multidisciplinary meeting. Adjuvant chemotherapy was considered for specific histotypes, such as Ewing's sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, extraskeletal osteosarcoma, and synovial sarcoma. After definitive surgery, the specimen was examined macroscopically and microscopically and reviewed at our multidisciplinary meeting. The seven patients with intralesional surgical margin in this study were closely followed up clinically and radiologically without immediate additional resurgery or radiotherapy. Patients were followed at least for 8 years after surgery including clinical and radiographic examination every 3–4 months in the first 2 years, 6 months for the next 2 years, and then every year.

Statistical methods

Differences in categorical data were analyzed using chi‐square test or Fisher's exact test. Student's t‐test was used to compare continuous variables. The oncological outcomes between PE and UE groups, including 5‐year DSS, MFS, and LRFS probability, were compared among each site group (extremity & trunk, head & neck, and retroperitoneal) using Kaplan–Meier method and log‐rank test. Intermediate malignancy tumors were evaluated only for LRFS due to their low potential of metastasis and mortality. Soft tissue sarcomas of extremity and trunk were selected for analyzing the effect of ReT on oncological outcomes. Possible prognostic variables chosen for univariate log‐rank test and Cox proportional hazard multivariate analysis with stepwise elimination method were gender (female or male), age (≤60 years or >60 years), tumor location (extremity or trunk), tumor size (≤5 cm or >5 cm), tumor depth (superficial or deep), FNCLCC grade (grades 1, 2, or 3), surgical margin (radical/wide or marginal/intralesional), received adjuvant radiotherapy (with or without adjuvant radiotherapy), received adjuvant chemotherapy (with or without adjuvant chemotherapy), and residual tumor status (PE, UE with ReT, or UE without ReT). A P‐value of less than 0.05 was regarded as statistically significant. All statistical analyses were computed using SPSS version 17 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, USA).

Results

Patients included in this study

Five hundred and thirty‐one surgically treated soft tissue sarcomas were identified from the database. Forty patients had antecedent metastasis, 25 patients were properly treated with wide surgical margin and referred after recurrence, nine cases had follow‐up period shorter than 2 years, and six patients had no tumor size. These 80 cases were excluded from this study. A total of 451 patients were enrolled comprising 290 PEs and 161 UEs, including six inappropriate partial excision or open biopsy in UE (Fig. 1, Table 1). There were 251 males with a male: female ratio of 1.3:1. The average age was 54.6 years (range, 15–95). The median follow‐up time for survivors was 72.6 months.
Figure 1

Flow diagram of patients included in this study.

Table 1

Patient characteristics of PE and UE, n = 451

CharacteristicPEUE P a
No. (%)No. (%)
Total290161
Gender
Male157 (54.1)94 (58.4)0.384
Age, year
≤60161 (55.5)90 (56.9)0.937
Site
Extremity241 (83.1)131 (81.4)0.247
Trunk29 (10)22 (13.7)
Head and Neck6 (2.1)3 (1.9)
Retroperitoneal14 (4.8)5 (3.1)
Histologic subtype
Malignant0.157
UPS107 (36.9)61 (37.9)
Liposarcoma48 (16.5)13 (8.1)
Synovial sarcoma23 (7.9)18 (11.2)
Leiomyosarcoma23 (7.9)20 (12.4)
Myxofibrosarcoma14 (4.8)6 (3.7)
Other40 (13.8)32 (19.9)
Intermediate malignancy0.007
Well‐differentiated liposarcoma32 (11)6 (3.7)
Solitary fibrous tumor3 (1)3 (1.9)
Myofibroblastic sarcoma0 (0)2 (1.2)
Size, cm
≤574 (25.5)92 (57.1)<0.001
Depth
Superficial41 (14.1)75 (46.6)<0.001
FNCLCC gradeb
123 (9)40 (26.7)<0.001
280 (31.4)40 (26.7)
3152 (59.6)70 (46.7)
AJCC stageb
I23 (9)40 (26.7)<0.001
II109 (42.7)76 (50.7)
III123 (48.2)34 (22.7)
Surgical margin
Intralesional/marginal4/19 (8)2/6 (5)0.612
Adjuvant radiotherapy
Yes258 (89)136 (84.5)0.169
Adjuvant chemotherapy
Yes12 (4.1)10 (6.2)0.327

PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; UPS, Undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer.

Chi‐square test for comparison between PE and UE.

Malignant tumor cases only, n = 405.

Flow diagram of patients included in this study. Patient characteristics of PE and UE, n = 451 PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; UPS, Undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer. Chi‐square test for comparison between PE and UE. Malignant tumor cases only, n = 405. Tumors were located in 90 upper limbs, 282 lower limbs, 51 superficial trunk walls, 17 retroperitoneal areas, and 11 head & neck regions. There were 405 malignant soft tissue tumors including 168 undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcomas (UPSs), 61 liposarcomas (45 myxoid/round cell, 12 pleomorphic, and four dedifferentiated liposarcomas), 41 synovial sarcomas, 43 leiomyosarcomas, 20 myxofibrosarcomas, 13 malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors, and 59 other malignant soft tissue tumors. Forty‐six intermediate malignancy tumors were 38 well‐differentiated liposarcomas, six solitary fibrous tumors, and two myofibroblastic sarcomas. The mean tumor size was 8.6 cm (range, 1–40). The margins employed in the initial surgery of UEs included 110 intralesional, 51 marginal margins. Three hundred and ninety‐four of 451 patients (87.4%) received adjuvant radiotherapy (131 preoperative and three postoperative radiotherapy for UE; 250 preoperative and eight postoperative radiotherapy for PE). Thirty‐eight patients received chemotherapy (22 neo‐adjuvant/adjuvant, 16 palliative after local or systemic recurrence).

Comparison between UE and PE

UE group more often involved tumors that were smaller than those from planned resections (mean 6.2 cm vs. 9.9 cm; P < 0.001). The majority of unplanned tumor resections involved tumors that were 5 cm or less (57.1% vs. 25.5%; P < 0.001). Tumors subjected to UE were more often superficial as compared to planned resections (46.6% vs. 14.1%; P < 0.001). Tumors subjected to unplanned excisions were more often lower grade and stage than tumors excised as planned resections (Table 1). Wide or radical margin was achieved for re‐excision in 95% of UE patients and it was similar to 92.4% of PE cases (P = 0.612). Despite UE being associated with smaller, more superficial and lower‐grade tumors, the proportion of extremity amputations for UE and PE were comparable (10.7% vs. 9.4%, P = 0.719). Requirement of soft tissue flap reconstructions to rebuild the operative defect was comparable between PE and UE (20.4% vs. 23.9%, P = 0.384). For extremity and trunk tumors, DSS for specific AJCC stage tended to be lower for UE, and a similar trend was observed in stages I for MFS and stage I, III for LRFS (Table 2 and Fig. 2). DSS in head and neck sarcoma was lower in UE group; however, the probability of MFS and LRFS probability was equal. Retroperitoneal tumors had the worst DSS rate than the other sites and LRFS of UE in this area was significantly lower than PE (P = 0.018). Percentage of LRFS between PE and UE was similar in intermediate malignancy tumors.
Table 2

Comparison of oncologic outcome between planned excision and unplanned excision

OutcomePE (CIs)UE (CIs) P a
5‐year DSS (%)
Extremity and trunk78.6 (73.1–84.1)79.7 (72.6–86.8)0.801
Stage I10097.1 (91.6–100)0.315
Stage II84.9 (77.3–92.5)79.9 (69.9–89.9)0.470
Stage III68.7 (59.7–77.7)61.2 (44–78.4)0.326
Head and neck10075 (32.5–100)0.386
Retroperitoneal59.3 (23–95.6)33.3 (0–86.6)0.187
5‐year MFS (%)
Extremity and trunk65.9 (59.6–72.2)72.7 (64.9–80.5)0.088
Stage I95 (85.4–100)80.3 (65.6–95)0.183
Stage II73.7 (64.7–82.7)74.9 (64.3–85.5)0.909
Stage III53.2 (43.8–62.6)58 (39.6–76.4)0.573
Head and neck100100
Retroperitoneal66.7 (35.9–97.5)1000.351
5‐year LRFS (%)
Extremity and trunk88.9 (84.4–93.4)86.9 (80.8–93)0.984
Stage I10082.7 (68.8–96.6)0.072
Stage II89 (82.5–95.5)92.9 (87–98.8)0.369
Stage III86.4 (79–93.8)75.5 (57.3–93.7)0.407
Head and neck80 (44.9–100)80 (44.9–100)0.937
Retroperitoneal71.1 (35.8–100)33 (0–86.6)0.018
Intermediate tumor97.5 (91.6–100)1000.509

PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; CIs, 95% confidence intervals; DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival; −, No event occurred in both groups.

Log‐rank test.

Figure 2

(A) Disease‐specific survival and (B) local‐recurrence‐free survival of planned excision (PE) and unplanned excision (UE) of extremity and trunk sarcoma.

Comparison of oncologic outcome between planned excision and unplanned excision PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; CIs, 95% confidence intervals; DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival; −, No event occurred in both groups. Log‐rank test. (A) Disease‐specific survival and (B) local‐recurrence‐free survival of planned excision (PE) and unplanned excision (UE) of extremity and trunk sarcoma.

ReT in re‐excision specimen

ReT was presented in 88, of 161 UEs re‐excision specimens (54.7%), including 15 macroscopically ReT‐negative but microscopically ReT‐positive cases. Seventy‐five of 142 (52.8%) UEs of extremity and trunk had residual disease (Table 3). ReT was more often found in older age and larger tumor size than the nonresidual group.
Table 3

Background of extremity and trunk UE cases with and without residual tumor, n = 142

CharacteristicReT (+)ReT (−) P
No. (%)No. (%)
Total7567
Gender
Male39 (52)43 (64.2)0.174b
Age, year
≤6036 (48)46 (68.7)0.017b
Site
Extremity65 (86.7)46 (68.7)0.813b
Trunk10 (13.3)21 (31.3)
Size, cm
≤537 (49.3)47 (70.1)0.016b
Depth
Superficial31 (41.3)38 (56.7)0.092b
FNCLCC grade
117 (22.7)20 (29.9)0.050a
216 (21.3)23 (34.3)
342 (56)24 (35.8)
AJCC stage
I17 (22.7)20 (29.9)0.005a
II33 (44)40 (59.7)
III25 (33.3)7 (10.4)
Surgical margin
Intralesional/marginal6 (8)c 1 (1.5)0.120b
Adjuvant radiotherapy
Yes60 (80)61 (91)0.096b
Adjuvant chemotherapy
Yes6 (8)3 (4.5)0.500b

UE, Unplanned excision; ReT, Residual tumor; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer.

Chi‐square test.

Fisher's exact test.

Including four microscopically positive margin cases.

Background of extremity and trunk UE cases with and without residual tumor, n = 142 UE, Unplanned excision; ReT, Residual tumor; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer. Chi‐square test. Fisher's exact test. Including four microscopically positive margin cases. Amputation rate of extremity sarcomas was significantly different when residual disease was considered; 12 of 65 UEs with ReT lost their limbs as compared to 1 of 57 UEs without ReT (18.5% vs. 1.8%, P = 0.003). UE with ReT had significantly lower survival than UE without ReT in stage I (LRFS: P = 0.006; MFS: P = 0.045) and stage II (LRFS: P = 0.035, MFS: P = 0.008 and DSS: P = 0.002) (Table 4, Fig. 3).
Table 4

Comparison of oncologic outcomes between PE and UE with and without ReT in extremity and trunk sarcomas

OutcomePE (CIs)UE (CIs)UE (CIs) P a
ReT (+)ReT (−)
5‐year DSS (%)
All78.6 (73.1–84.1)68.8 (57.4–80.2)92 (85.1–98.9)<0.001
Stage I10093.3 (80.8–100)1000.077
Stage II84.9 (77.3–92.5)64.6 (46.2–83)91.8 (82.8–100)0.002
Stage III68.7 (59.7–77.7)58.5 (38.5–78.5)71.4 (37.9–100)0.409
5‐year MFS (%)
All65.9 (59.6–72.2)56.1 (43.6–68.6)90.9 (84–97.8)<0.001
Stage I95 (85.4–100)95 (85.4–100)62.9 (36–89.8)0.045
Stage II73.7 (64.7–82.7)55.7 (36.5–74.9)89.9 (80.5–99.3)0.008
Stage III53.2 (43.8–62.6)51.5 (30.5–72.5)83.3 (53.5–100)0.163
5‐year LRFS (%)
All88.9 (84.4–93.4)75.8 (64.6–87)98.4 (95.3–100)<0.001
Stage I10060.4 (33–87.8)1000.006
Stage II89 (82.5–95.5)87.7 (76.3–99.1)97.4 (92.3–100)0.035
Stage III86.4 (79–93.8)68.5 (45.8–91.2)1000.169

PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; CIs, 95% confidence intervals; ReT, Residual tumor; DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival.

Log‐rank test between UE with and without ReT.

Figure 3

(A) Disease‐specific survival and (B) local‐recurrence‐free survival of unplanned excision with residual tumor (ReT (+)) and without residual tumor (ReT (−)) in extremity and trunk sarcoma.

Comparison of oncologic outcomes between PE and UE with and without ReT in extremity and trunk sarcomas PE, Planned excision; UE, Unplanned excision; CIs, 95% confidence intervals; ReT, Residual tumor; DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival. Log‐rank test between UE with and without ReT. (A) Disease‐specific survival and (B) local‐recurrence‐free survival of unplanned excision with residual tumor (ReT (+)) and without residual tumor (ReT (−)) in extremity and trunk sarcoma.

Prognostic factors

Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed the following predictors as independent adverse predictors: size greater than 5 cm, FNCLCC grades 2 and 3, and UE with ReT (for DSS), size greater than 5 cm, FNCLCC grade 3, deep location and UE with ReT (for MFS), and ReT status (for LRFS) (Table 5). The strongest negative predictor for LRFS was ReT status, and for MFS and DSS was tumor grade.
Table 5

Prognostic factors for DSS, MFS, and LRFS of extremity and trunk sarcomas

Prognostic factorReferenceHR (95% CI) P
DSS
Size > 5 cmSize ≤ 5 cm2.39 (1.39–4.11)0.002
FNCLCC 2FNCLCC 15.58 (1.30–23.91)0.020
FNCLCC 3FNCLCC 16.47 (1.55–26.94)0.010
UE with ReTPE2.02 (1.25–3.26)0.004
MFS
Size > 5 cmSize ≤ 5 cm1.86 (1.18–2.93)0.007
FNCLCC 3FNCLCC 12.92 (1.33–6.40)0.008
Deep locationSuperficial location1.74 (1.03–2.95)0.040
UE with ReTPE1.62 (1.05–2.51)0.030
LRFS
UE without ReTPE0.11 (0.02–0.79)0.028
UE with ReTPE1.94 (1.05–3.59)0.034

DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival; HR, Hazard ratio; CI, Confidence interval; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; UE, Unplanned excision; ReT, Residual tumor; PE, Planned excision.

Prognostic factors for DSS, MFS, and LRFS of extremity and trunk sarcomas DSS, Disease‐specific survival; MFS, Metastasis‐free survival; LRFS, Local‐recurrence‐free survival; HR, Hazard ratio; CI, Confidence interval; FNCLCC, Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte le Cancer; UE, Unplanned excision; ReT, Residual tumor; PE, Planned excision.

Discussion

Soft tissue sarcomas are rare and this may explain the high incidence of inadvertent excision. While most general practitioners and surgeons may only see a limited number of soft tissue sarcomas in a lifetime, they may see a considerable number of small and superficial benign entities such as lipoma and schwannoma. In this regard, this study identified that the proportion of small and superficial tumors was significantly higher in unplanned excisions as compared to planned excisions. The main consequences for patients who undergo inadvertent excision is the requirement of further surgery, the delay in appropriate treatment, the financial cost of further care, and the impact on local and systemic outcomes 12, 19, 20, 21. A worrisome finding is that despite available guidelines and formal medical training, 33% of referred patients to our institution occurred after inadvertent excision. This is similar to other reports where prereferral surgical intervention may be as high as 70% 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, 12, 14, 22. The local consequences of inadvertent resection are either contamination of surrounding structures or the presence of residual disease. These two may dramatically alter the subsequent local management of disease to avoid local recurrence of disease. Residual disease was detected in at least 55% of all patients in our series who were referred in for subsequent surgical management after unplanned excisions. This is similar to that reported in the literature 13. At times, the finding of positive margin may herald this possibility of residual disease. In our study, the incidence of positive margins in previous surgery before referral was 87%. The literature has reported a similar incidence with a range that can be as high as 82% 23. What is compelling about our findings and others, of the high incidence of residual tumor and positive margin surgery following inadvertent resection is that these tumors are usually smaller (≤5 cm) and superficial to the deep fascia in comparison to tumors primarily treated at a specialist center where they are larger (>5 cm) and deep to the deep fascia. What unplanned excisions invoke is the potential for impacting treatment and outcomes by significantly upgrading local surgical treatment in a tumor that would normally be easily treated by a specialist center 11, 14, 24. What such upgrading may require is the use of soft tissue flap reconstructions or amputation to control local disease. Almost 1/5 of all patients who were referred after inadvertent excision with residual tumor required amputation for local control in our series. This was over twice the amount as compared to patients with planned excisions. Others have also reported the need for amputation to control local disease for referrals after inadvertent excision and specifically for the management of extensive soft tissue complications 24. What remains controversial is the impact of UEs on survival outcomes. The literature remains ambivalent with some studies reporting poorer rates of local control after unplanned excisions, while others have reported paradoxically the opposite 7, 10, 12. In our study, apart from retroperitoneal tumor, no significant difference in LRFS between UE and PE was found (Table 2 and Fig. 2). However, in the cohort of extremity and trunk sarcomas, a relatively strong tendency for poorer LRFS was observed at AJCC stage I (P = 0.072), which would otherwise enjoy the best outcomes after appropriate management because of their small size and lower grade. This result may demonstrate that small soft tissue sarcomas do occur in significant proportions but appropriate diagnosis of these is crucial for good oncological outcomes. In contrast, the results of stages II and III may mean that wider resection including possible contaminated area or amputation can reduce the risk of local recurrence after UE to the same level as in PE. By contrast with the poorer local control of UE reported by many papers, significantly poor patient survival for UE, overall survival or DSS, has never been published. In our study, even after stratification according to the AJCC stage, despite favorable DSS of PE over UE, there was no statistical significance at each stage of extremity and trunk sarcomas (P = 0.315–0.470). Our result is consistent with the past literature, but further investigation to compare UE with PE with a larger number of cases at each stratified group is required for verification. A number of authors have highlighted the significance of residual tumor on survival 8, 12, 15. We have shown that ReT‐positive group had significantly worse outcomes for stages I and II. Even for stage III, a low statistical power due to small number of cases (only 25 ReT‐negative and 8 ReT‐positive cases at stage III) can be the main reason for no significance. Also, by Cox analysis, ReT‐positive status was revealed as an independent adverse predictor of local control and disease‐specific survivals, along with larger size and higher grade. This is a critical finding in light of the fact that 55% of all referred patients who have experienced UE had residual tumor. This means that approximately a half of UE patients fall into a category in which significantly poorer outcomes are expected. However, the interpretation of this finding should be careful because ReT status can be a confounding factor that can be affected by various other factors. Although poor quality of preceding UE procedure is thought to be mainly responsible for ReT‐positive status, it may partially represent invasive nature or infiltration of tumor. In other words, some of the ReT positivity may have been due to tumor nature rather than UE procedure itself. There were some limitations of the current study. Firstly, the research design was retrospective review which may be affected by selection bias. Secondly, the statistical power is reduced when stratifying for subgroup analysis due to the limited number of patients in each group. This may be more pertinent with regard to AJCC stage III (statistical power = 0.4). Lastly, tumor staging depended on either MRI or from the pathology report. Our study highlights the importance of appropriate sarcoma patient management. The fact that even excision of small and superficial tumors, which are often targeted by nonexperts, may result in significantly inferior survival and outcomes provides compelling evidence that all soft tissue lumps should undergo anatomic imaging and be considered for biopsy prior to excision by expert teams.

Conflict of Interest

The authors made no disclosures.
  23 in total

1.  Outcomes of re-excision after unplanned excisions of soft-tissue sarcomas.

Authors:  Mark W Manoso; Deborah A Frassica; E Gene Deune; Frank J Frassica
Journal:  J Surg Oncol       Date:  2005-09-01       Impact factor: 3.454

2.  Prognostic effect of re-excision in adult soft tissue sarcoma of the extremity.

Authors:  Marco Fiore; Paolo G Casali; Rosalba Miceli; Luigi Mariani; Rossella Bertulli; Laura Lozza; Paola Collini; Patrizia Olmi; Chiara Mussi; Alessandro Gronchi
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2006-01-01       Impact factor: 5.344

3.  The impact of previous surgical manipulation of subcutaneous sarcoma on oncologic outcome.

Authors:  Bruce T Rougraff; Kenneth Davis; Terence Cudahy
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 4.176

4.  The indications for and the prognostic significance of amputation as the primary surgical procedure for localized soft tissue sarcoma of the extremity.

Authors:  Michelle A Ghert; Adesegun Abudu; Natasha Driver; Aileen M Davis; Anthony M Griffin; Dawn Pearce; Lawrence White; Brian O'Sullivan; Charles N Catton; Robert S Bell; Jay S Wunder
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2004-12-27       Impact factor: 5.344

5.  Predictive value of grade for metastasis development in the main histologic types of adult soft tissue sarcomas: a study of 1240 patients from the French Federation of Cancer Centers Sarcoma Group.

Authors:  J M Coindre; P Terrier; L Guillou; V Le Doussal; F Collin; D Ranchère; X Sastre; M O Vilain; F Bonichon; B N'Guyen Bui
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2001-05-15       Impact factor: 6.860

6.  Classification of positive margins after resection of soft-tissue sarcoma of the limb predicts the risk of local recurrence.

Authors:  C H Gerrand; J S Wunder; R A Kandel; B O'Sullivan; C N Catton; R S Bell; A M Griffin; A M Davis
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Br       Date:  2001-11

7.  Effect of reresection in extremity soft tissue sarcoma.

Authors:  J J Lewis; D Leung; J Espat; J M Woodruff; M F Brennan
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 12.969

8.  Local recurrence of disease after unplanned excisions of high-grade soft tissue sarcomas.

Authors:  Benjamin K Potter; Sheila C Adams; J David Pitcher; H Thomas Temple
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2008-09-26       Impact factor: 4.176

9.  Errors in diagnosis and margin determination of soft-tissue sarcomas initially treated at non-tertiary centers.

Authors:  R L Randall; J D Bruckner; M D Papenhausen; T Thurman; E U Conrad
Journal:  Orthopedics       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 1.390

10.  Clinical significance of additional wide resection for unplanned resection of high grade soft tissue sarcoma.

Authors:  T Morii; H Yabe; H Morioka; U Anazawa; Y Suzuki; Y Toyama
Journal:  Open Orthop J       Date:  2008-07-30
View more
  12 in total

1.  Relevance of Reference Centers in Sarcoma Care and Quality Item Evaluation: Results from the Prospective Registry of the Spanish Group for Research in Sarcoma (GEIS).

Authors:  Javier Martin-Broto; Nadia Hindi; Josefina Cruz; Javier Martinez-Trufero; Claudia Valverde; Luis M De Sande; Angeles Sala; Lorena Bellido; Ana De Juan; Jordi Rubió-Casadevall; Roberto Diaz-Beveridge; Ricardo Cubedo; Oscar Tendero; Diego Salinas; Isidro Gracia; Rafael Ramos; Silvia Baguè; Antonio Gutierrez; José Duran-Moreno; Antonio Lopez-Pousa
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2018-11-08

2.  Unplanned excision of soft tissue sarcoma: does it impact the accuracy of intra-operative pathologic assessment at time of re-excision?

Authors:  Shai S Shemesh; Erika L Garbrecht; Tal Frenkel Rutenberg; Sheila A Conway; Andrew E Rosenberg; Juan Pretell-Mazzini
Journal:  Int Orthop       Date:  2021-08-20       Impact factor: 3.075

Review 3.  Establishing musculoskeletal oncology service in resource constrained country: challenges and solutions.

Authors:  Obada Hasan; Akbar Zubairi; Zohaib Nawaz; Masood Umer
Journal:  Int J Surg Oncol (N Y)       Date:  2017-11-15

4.  Malignant tumours of the foot and ankle.

Authors:  E Mascard; N Gaspar; L Brugières; C Glorion; S Pannier; A Gomez-Brouchet
Journal:  EFORT Open Rev       Date:  2017-05-11

5.  Treatment of angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma after unplanned excision: a case report.

Authors:  Kazuhiko Hashimoto; Shunji Nishimura; Ryosuke Kakinoki; Masao Akagi
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2018-08-31

6.  Tumor Resection Guided by Intraoperative Indocyanine Green Dye Fluorescence Angiography Results in Negative Surgical Margins and Decreased Local Recurrence in an Orthotopic Mouse Model of Osteosarcoma.

Authors:  Adel Mahjoub; Alejandro Morales-Restrepo; Mitchell S Fourman; Jonathan B Mandell; Lu Feiqi; Margaret L Hankins; Rebecca J Watters; Kurt R Weiss
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2018-12-27       Impact factor: 5.344

7.  Surgery in reference centers improves survival of sarcoma patients: a nationwide study.

Authors:  J-Y Blay; C Honoré; E Stoeckle; P Meeus; M Jafari; F Gouin; P Anract; G Ferron; A Rochwerger; M Ropars; S Carrere; F Marchal; F Sirveaux; A Di Marco; L R Le Nail; J Guiramand; G Vaz; J-C Machiavello; O Marco; S Causeret; P Gimbergues; F Fiorenza; L Chaigneau; F Guillemin; J-M Guilloit; F Dujardin; J-P Spano; J-C Ruzic; A Michot; P Soibinet; E Bompas; C Chevreau; F Duffaud; M Rios; C Perrin; N Firmin; F Bertucci; C Le Pechoux; F Le Loarer; O Collard; M Karanian-Philippe; M Brahmi; A Dufresne; A Dupré; F Ducimetière; A Giraud; D Pérol; M Toulmonde; I Ray-Coquard; A Italiano; A Le Cesne; N Penel; S Bonvalot
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2019-07-01       Impact factor: 32.976

8.  Improved survival using specialized multidisciplinary board in sarcoma patients.

Authors:  J-Y Blay; P Soibinet; N Penel; E Bompas; F Duffaud; E Stoeckle; O Mir; J Adam; C Chevreau; S Bonvalot; M Rios; P Kerbrat; D Cupissol; P Anract; F Gouin; J-E Kurtz; C Lebbe; N Isambert; F Bertucci; M Toumonde; A Thyss; S Piperno-Neumann; P Dubray-Longeras; P Meeus; F Ducimetière; A Giraud; J-M Coindre; I Ray-Coquard; A Italiano; A Le Cesne
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 32.976

Review 9.  Re-excision after unplanned excision of soft tissue sarcoma: A systematic review and metanalysis. The rationale of systematic re-excision.

Authors:  Federico Sacchetti; Andac Celasun Alsina; Riccardo Morganti; Matteo Innocenti; Lorenzo Andreani; Francesco Muratori; Guido Scoccianti; Francesca Totti; Domenico Andrea Campanacci; Rodolfo Capanna
Journal:  J Orthop       Date:  2021-05-14

10.  Soft-tissue Sarcomas.

Authors:  Domagoj Ante Vodanovich; Peter F M Choong
Journal:  Indian J Orthop       Date:  2018 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.251

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.