| Literature DB >> 30559960 |
Johnathan R Lex1, Scott Evans1, Jonathan D Stevenson1, Michael Parry1, Lee M Jeys1,2, Robert J Grimer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dedifferentiated chondrosarcomas (CS) are a high-grade variant of CS that confers a 5-year survival of around 10-24%. Dedifferentiated CS arising from the pelvis confers an even worse prognosis. QUESTIONS: (1) What is the prognosis of patients with dedifferentiated CS of the pelvis? (2) Do wide margins or type of surgical intervention influence outcome? (3) Does the use of adjuvant therapy affect outcome?Entities:
Keywords: Amputation; Chondrosarcoma; Dedifferentiated; Limb-salvage; Pelvis; Sarcoma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559960 PMCID: PMC6293503 DOI: 10.1186/s13569-018-0110-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sarcoma Res ISSN: 2045-3329
Fig. 1Frequency of tumour location within the pelvis
Patients demographics and outcomes who underwent attempted curative resection
| Patient | Age | Sex | Surgery | Margin | Correct pre-op diagnosis | Time to LR | Time to metastases | Time to death | Time alive | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 61 | F | AMPHQ | Intralesional | Yes | 14 | 13 | 33 | DOD | |
| 2 | 62 | M | AMPHQ | Wide | Yes | 121 | NED | |||
| 3 | 52 | F | AMPHQ | Marginal | Yes | 4 | 3 | 4 | DOD | |
| 4 | 55 | M | AMPHQ | Wide | Yes | 51 | NED | |||
| 5 | 55 | F | AMPHQ | Wide | Yes | 12 | NED | |||
| 6 | 72 | M | LSS | Intralesional | No | 0 | DOD | |||
| 7 | 51 | M | LSS | Marginal | No | 2 | 2 | 5 | DOD | |
| 8 | 49 | M | LSS | Intralesional | Yes | 10 | 12 | 12 | DOD | |
| 9 | 43 | F | LSS | Marginal | Yes | 13 | 13 | 15 | DOD | |
| 10 | 71 | M | LSS | Marginal | Yes | 2 | 4 | DOD | ||
| 11 | 47 | M | LSS | Intralesional | No | 5 | 5 | 9 | DOD | |
| 12 | 71 | F | LSS | Marginal | No | 2 | 3 | DOD | ||
| 13 | 44 | F | LSS | Wide | No | 20 | 24 | 29 | DOD | |
| 14 | 63 | F | LSS | Wide | Yes | 100 | NED | |||
| 15 | 47 | F | LSS | Marginal | No | 63 | NED | |||
| 16 | 57 | F | LSS | Intralesional | Yes | 3 | 0 | 7 | DOD | |
| 17 | 48 | M | LSS | Intralesional | No | 2 | 11 | 24 | AWD | |
| 18 | 54 | M | LSS | Intralesional | Yes | 2 | 2 | 3 | DOD |
F female, M male, AMPHQ hindquarter amputation, LSS limb salvage surgery, DOD dead of disease, NED no evidence of disease, AWD alive with disease
Fig. 2Pre-operative pelvis radiograph (a) and MRI (b) of a patient who underwent HQA. In this case, there was a large tumour involving both the hip joint and femoral neurovascular bundle
Fig. 3Pre-operative pelvis radiograph (a) and MRI (b) and post-operative radiograph (c) of a patient who underwent LSS through an internal hemipelvectomy and no reconstruction (flail hip) with wide margins (> 20 mm) and long-term survival achieved
Patient demographics by treatment group
| Overall cohort | Limb-salvage (LSS) | Hindquarter amputation (HQA) | Palliative | p-value (between LSS and HQA groups) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient number (n, %) | 31 | 13 (41.9%) | 5 (16.1%) | 13 (41.9%) | |
| Age (mean, range) | 55.6 (33–76) | 55.2 (43–72) | 57 (52–62) | 55.5 (33–76) | 0.716 |
| Enneking stage (n, %) | |||||
| Stage 2b | 21 (67.7%) | 13 (100%) | 5 (100%) | 3 (23.1%) | 1.000 |
| Stage 3b (metastases) | 10 (32.3%) | 0 | 0 | 10 (76.9%) | 1.000 |
| Biopsy diagnosis correct (n, %) | 11 (61.1%) | 6 (46.1%) | 5 (100%) | N/A | 0.036 |
| Tumour location, solitary P1 lesions (n, %) | 11 (35.5%) | 1 (7.7%) | 3 (60%) | 7 (53.8%) | 0.017 |
| Tumour size (max diameter, cm) | 110.9 (45–200) | 108.8 (45–200) | 117.5 (90–180) | N/A | 0.756 |
| Chemotherapy (n, %) | 15 (48.4%) | 6 (46.1%) | 2 (40%) | 7 (53.8%) | 0.814 |
| Radiotherapy (n, %) | 7 (22.6%) | 2 (15.4%) | 1 (20%) | 4 (30.8%) | 0.814 |
| Surgery complications | 2 (11.8%) | 2 (15.4%) | 0 | N/A | 0.352 |
Fig. 4a Overall survival between patients treated with either curative or palliative intent (p = 0.002). b. Disease-free survival between amputation and limb-salvage surgery (p = 0.047). AMPHQ = hindquarter amputation; LSS = Limb-salvage surgery. c. Kaplan–Meier graph comparing overall survival for patients who received intralesional and marginal resections to wide resections (p = 0.019). IL intralesional, M marginal
Surgical margins achieved by the operation conducted
| Surgical margins | Overall | Limb salvage | Hindquarter amputation | Secondary hindquarter amputation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intralesional (n,%) | 7 (33.3%) | 6 (46.1%) | 1 (20.0%) | 0 |
| Marginal (n, %) | 7 (33.3%) | 5 (38.5%) | 1 (20.0%) | 1 (33.3%) |
| Wide (n, %) | 7 (33.3%) | 2 (15.4%) | 3 (60.0%) | 2 (66.7%) |
Survival outcomes for all patients with dedifferentiated CS of the pelvis treated with either palliative or curative intent from available literature over the last 30 years
| Study | Number of patients | Mortality rate | Time to disease recurrence, months | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frassica et al. [ | 23 | 19–21 (82.6%–91.3%) | N/A | Calculated from available data (pelvic data not explicitly reported) |
| Liu et al. [ | 13 | 12 (92.3%) | 10.6 | |
| Grimer et al. [ | 95 | N/A | N/A | No pelvis survival outcomes reported |
| Mavrogenis et al. [ | 32 | 22 (68.8%) | 13 | Calculated from available data on Kaplan–Meier curves |
| Weber et al. [ | 1 | 1 (100%) | 8 | |
| Sheth et al. [ | 13 | 10 (76.9%) | 4.5 | |
| Current study | 31 | 25 (80.6%) | 6.2 |