| Literature DB >> 27785071 |
Alessandro De Vita1, Laura Mercatali1, Federica Recine1, Federica Pieri2, Nada Riva1, Alberto Bongiovanni1, Chiara Liverani1, Chiara Spadazzi1, Giacomo Miserocchi1, Dino Amadori1, Toni Ibrahim1.
Abstract
Sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of mesenchymal tumors arising from soft tissue or bone, with an uncertain etiology and difficult classification. Soft tissue sarcomas (STSs) account for around 1% of all adult cancers. Till date, more than 50 histologic subtypes have been identified. Adipocyte sarcoma or liposarcoma (LPS) is one of the most common STS subtypes, accounting for 15% of all sarcomas, with an incidence of 24% of all extremity STSs and 45% of all retroperitoneal STSs. The new World Health Organization classification system has divided LPS into four different subgroups: atypical lipomatous tumor/well-differentiated LPS, dedifferentiated LPS, myxoid LPS, and pleomorphic LPS. These lesions can develop at any location and exhibit different aggressive potentials reflecting their morphologic diversity and clinical behavior. Patients affected by LPS should be managed in specialized multidisciplinary cancer centers. Whereas surgical resection is the mainstay of treatment for localized disease, the benefits of adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy are still unclear. Systemic treatment, particularly chemotherapy, is still limited in metastatic disease. Despite the efforts toward a better understanding of the biology of LPS, the outcome of advanced and metastatic patients remains poor. The advent of targeted therapies may lead to an improvement of treatment options and clinical outcomes. A larger patient enrollment into translational and clinical studies will help increase the knowledge of the biological behavior of LPSs, test new drugs, and introduce new methodological studies, that is, on treatment response.Entities:
Keywords: adipocytic sarcomas; classification; liposarcomas; management
Year: 2016 PMID: 27785071 PMCID: PMC5067014 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S112580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Summary of some features of LPS
| Histotypes | % of incidence in LPS | Diagnosis | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALT: adipocytic, sclerosing, and inflammatory | 40–45 together with DDLPS | FISH analysis of MDM2 | Locally aggressive mesenchymal neoplasm. Recurrence is likely to occur if excision is not complete. |
| DDLPS | 40–45 together with ALT | FISH analysis of MDM2 | Strong propensity for distant lung metastases (10%–15%) and recurrence |
| MLPS | 30 | FISH analysis of aberrant fusion gene FUS–CHOP/DDIT3 | Frequent recurrence. 10%–20% of patients develop distant metastases |
| PLS | 5 | Histologic analysis | Local recurrence in 30%–35% of patients; lung is a frequent site of relapse, but bone and liver metastases have also been reported |
Abbreviations: ALT, atypical lipomatous tumor; DDLPS, dedifferentiated liposarcoma; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; LPS, liposarcoma; MDM2, mouse double minute 2; MLPS, myxoid liposarcoma; PLS, pleomorphic liposarcoma.