| Literature DB >> 29096658 |
Dumnoensun Pruksakorn1,2, Sratwadee Lorsomradee3, Areerak Phanphaisarn4, Pimpisa Teeyakasem4, Jeerawan Klangjorhor4, Parunya Chaiyawat4, Natapong Kosachunhanun5, Jongkolnee Settakorn6, Olarn Arpornchayanon7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of recurrent aggressive fibromatosis (AF) following surgical resection is a clinical challenge. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been reported to be an effective option for controlling the disease. However, long-term NSAID use can result in unfavorable complications. This study was a trial of the use of intralesional steroid injection (ILSI) including investigation of safety margins and clinical outcomes of high-dose steroids for local use treatment of AF.Entities:
Keywords: Aggressive fibromatosis; Desmoid; Injections; Intralesion; Steroids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29096658 PMCID: PMC5667493 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-017-1262-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1Operational diagram of ILSI for recurrent fibromatosis
Demographic data and initial evaluation
| Case no. | Age | Gender | Dose (mg)‡ | BMI (kg/m2) | Site of tumor | Treatment history |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01† | 44 | Male | 80 | 30.04 | Lower back | Post-3rd surgery with S and SD |
| 02 | 51 | Female | 47 | 18.83 | Lower back | Post-1st surgery with S and PD |
| 03 | 30 | Female | 52 | 21.64 | Shoulder | Post-3rd surgery with S and PD |
| 04 | 23 | Male | 68 | 23.53 | Lower neck | Post-2nd surgery with S and PD |
| 05 | 55 | Female | 58 | 25.78 | Shoulder | Post-2nd surgery with S and PD |
| 06 | 45 | Female | 53 | 20.70 | Thigh | Post-3rd surgery with S and SD |
| 07 | 18 | Male | 60 | 20.05 | Shoulder | Post-1st surgery with S and PD |
| 08 | 56 | Female | 65 | 24.77 | Shoulder | Post-5th surgery with S and SD |
| 09 | 40 | Female | 58 | 22.65 | Forearm | Post-3rd surgery with S and PD |
| 10† | 20 | Male | 65 | 21.22 | Thigh | Post-3rd surgery with AS and PD |
S symptomatic disease including pain and/or discomfort, AS asymptomatic disease, SD stable disease, PD progressive disease
†Dropped out of study,
‡mg/episode
Fig. 2Percentage of unfavorable events out of 168 observations each month (21 observed parameters and 8 participants): nine items from subjective interviews, four items from examination parameters, and eight items from laboratory parameters
Fig. 3Numeric rating scale for pain of pre- and post-ILSI (a) and functional ability score of pre- and post-ILSI (b)
Tumor response by anatomical measurement
| Case no. | Before injection† | After ILSI‡ | The 3rd-month after ILSI§ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 02 | Progressive disease | Stable disease | Stable disease |
| 03 | Progressive disease | Stable disease | Progressive disease |
| 04 | Progressive disease | Stable disease | Stable disease |
| 05 | Progressive disease | Stable disease | Progressive disease |
| 06 | Stable disease | Stable disease | Stabile disease |
| 07 | Progressive disease | Progressive disease | Progressive disease |
| 08 | Stable disease | Stable disease | Stable disease |
| 09 | Progressive disease | Stable disease | Stable disease |
ILSI intralesional steroid injection
†Baseline MRI compared with the previous MRI
‡Compared with baseline MRI
§Compared with baseline MRI
Fig. 4Representative MRI from case No. 3. Column a: sixth month after first surgical operation and three months before starting of the procedure. Column b: just prior to the first ILSI determined progression of tumor. Column c: tumor stabilization from baseline after the final protocol of ILSI. Column d: progression disease from baseline after the third month of ILSI