| Literature DB >> 35804827 |
Megan Delisle1, Bader Alshamsan2,3, Kalki Nagaratnam4, Denise Smith5, Ying Wang6,7, Amirrtha Srikanthan3,8,9.
Abstract
This study assesses the survival in patients undergoing metastasectomy for leiomyosarcoma (LMS) and compares the outcomes by the site of metastasectomy. We conducted a systematic review and pooled survival analysis of patients undergoing metastasectomy for LMS. Survival was compared between sites of metastasectomy. We identified 23 studies including 573 patients undergoing metastasectomy for LMS. The pooled median survival was 59.6 months (95% CI 33.3 to 66.0). The pooled median survival was longest for lung metastasectomy (72.8 months 95% CI 63.0 to 82.5), followed by liver (34.8 months 95% CI 22.3 to 47.2), spine (14.1 months 95% CI 8.6 to 19.7), and brain (14 months 95% CI 6.7 to 21.3). Two studies compared the survival outcomes between patients who did, versus who did not undergo metastasectomy; both demonstrated a significantly improved survival with metastasectomy. We conclude that surgery is currently being utilized for LMS metastases to the lung, liver, spine, and brain with acceptable survival. Although low quality, comparative studies support a survival benefit with metastasectomy. In the absence of randomized studies, it is impossible to determine whether the survival benefit associated with metastasectomy is due to careful patient selection rather than a surgical advantage; limited data were included about patient selection.Entities:
Keywords: leiomyosarcoma; metastasectomy; metastasis; sarcoma; surgery; survival; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35804827 PMCID: PMC9264936 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14133055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Study details.
| Study | Country | Center(s)/Registry | Inclusion Dates | Study Design | Inclusion Criteria |
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| Anraku, 2004 | Japan | Metastatic lung tumor study group of Japan | 1984–2002 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for uterine malignancies |
| Blackmon, 2009 | USA | University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center | 1998–2006 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS and bone sarcoma |
| Burt, 2011 | USA | The Brigham and Women’s Hospital | 1989–2004 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS and bone sarcoma |
| Chen, 1998 | USA | The Johns Hopkins Hospital | 1984–1995 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for LMS |
| Chudgar, 2017 | USA | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | 1991–2014 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS |
| Deguchi, 2020 | Japan | Six institutes in Japan | 2002–2018 | Case series | Brain metastasectomy for STS and bone sarcoma |
| Ercolani, 2005 | Italy | University of Bologna | 1990–2003 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for noncolorectal nonneuroendocrine tumors |
| Faraj, 2015 | Lebanon | American University of Beirut Medical Center | 1998–2009 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for colorectal LMS |
| Farid, 2013 | Singapore | National University of Singapore | 2002–2010 | Cohort study | All LMS |
| Goumard, 2018 | USA | University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center | 1998–2015 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for non-GIST sarcoma |
| Kato, 2020 | Japan | Kanazawa University | 2005–2016 | Case series | Spine metastasectomy for LMS |
| Kim, 2017 | Korea | Asian Medical Center | 2003–2015 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for intra-abdominal LMS |
| Lang, 2000 | Germany | Hanover Medical School | 1982–1996 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for LMS |
| Liebl, 2007 | Germany | University Medical Centre | 1990–2005 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS |
| Lin, 2015 | USA | University of California Los Angeles Medical Center | 1990–2010 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS and bone sarcoma |
| Marudanayagam, 2010 | UK | Queen Elizabeth University Hospital | 1997–2009 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for STS |
| Paramanathan, 2013 | Australia | Peter MacCallum Cancer Center and St. Vincent’s Health | 2001–2011 | Case Series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for sarcoma of gynecologic origin and STS |
| Rao, 2008 | USA | University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center | 1993–2005 | Case series | Spine resection for primary or metastatic STS or bone sarcoma |
| Smith, 2009 | USA | Roswell Park Cancer Institute | 1976–2000 | Case series | Pulmonary metastasectomy for STS surviving longer than five years |
| Van Cann, 2018 | Belgium | University Hospitals Leuven | 2000–2014 | Cohort study | Metastatic LMS |
| Zacherl, 2011 | Austria | Medical University of Vienna and Medical University of Graz | 1987–2006 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for STS |
| Zhang, 2015 | China | Central Hospital of PLA | 2000–2009 | Case series | Hepatic metastasectomy for extremity STS surviving longer than five years |
| Ziewacz, 2012 | USA | University of Michigan | 2005–2011 | Case series | Spine metastasectomy for LMS |
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of included patients from studies reporting (A) and not reporting (B) these details for patients with LMS undergoing metastasectomy.
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| Burt, 2011 | 31 | Mean 52 (SD ± 9.3) | 7 | Uterus 13; extremity 10; retroperitoneum 4; trunk 2; other 2 | NR | Mean 48 (SD ± 61) | Lung 31 | ||
| Chen, 1998 | 11 | 57 (30–69) | 2 | Retroperitoneum 5; gastric 3; small intestine 2; uterine/adnexal 1 | NR | Mean 16 (SD ± 4, range 0–40 months) | Liver 11 | ||
| Faraj, 2015 | 5 | 47 (24–69) | 2 | Colon 4; rectum 1 | 3/2 | NR | Liver 5; adrenal 1 | ||
| Kato, 2020 | 10 | Mean 53 (24–69) | 5 | Retroperitoneum 3; uterus 2; stomach 2; extremity 2; maxillary sinus 1 | 1/9 | Mean 50 (range 10–204) | Spine 10; liver 1; lymph nodes 1 peritoneum 3; lung 3 | ||
| Kim, 2017 | 10 | 48 (38–69) | 3 | Retroperitoneum 5; pancreas 1; small bowel 2; colon 1; stomach 1 | 2/8 | Median 15 (range 5–38) | Liver 10 | ||
| Lang, 2000 b | 26 | Mean 54 (23–67) | 18 | Stomach 8; small bowel 4; vena cava 1; kidney 1; colon 1; upper abdomen/stomach 5; retroperitoneum 5; not specified 1 | 8/15 c | Median 33 (range 0–164) | Liver 23; peritoneum 4; bone 1; lymph nodes 4 | ||
| Paramanathan, 2013 d | 12 | 58 (44–76) | 0 | Uterus 12; broad ligament/adnexal 1 | 0/13 | Median 26 (range 7–156) | Lung 13 | ||
| Ziewacz, 2012 | 8 | Mean 51 (25–66) | 3 | Uterus 4; chest wall 1; extremity 2; retroperitoneum 1 | NR | NR | Spine 8 | ||
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| Anraku, 2004 | 133 | 11 | Mean 56 (26–80) | 0 | Squamous cell carcinoma 58; adenocarcinoma 13; endometrial adenocarcinoma 23; choriocarcinoma 16; LMS 11; other 12 | Uterine 133 | 8/125 | Range 0–243 months (0 months 8; 1–11 months 23; 12–35 months 38; ≥36 months 60) | Lung 133; extra-pulmonary 8 |
| Blackmon, 2009 | 234 | 41 | Mean 43 (8–83) | 123 | Osteosarcoma 46; MFH 33; SS 29; LMS 41; other 85 | Extremity 136; NR 98 | NR | NR | Lung only 147; lung + extra-pulmonary metastases 87 |
| Chudgar, 2017 | 539 | 169 | 54 (15–90) | 227 | LMS 169; pleomorphic sarcoma/MFH 130; SS 81; other 81; fibrosarcoma 33; LPS 30; MPNST 15 | Extremity 249; trunk 65; retroperitoneum/abdomen/pelvis 65; Visceral/GU/gynecologic 136; head and neck 24 | 71/468 | Median 16 months (IQR 8–36) | Lung only 492; lung + extra-pulmonary metastases 47 |
| Deguchi, 2020 | 22 | 5 | 45 (18–76) | 11 | ASPS 6; RMS 1; LMS 5, MPNST 1; osteosarcoma 1; epithelioid cell tumor 1; pleomorphic sarcoma 2 SS 2; undifferentiated sarcoma 1; UPS 2 | NR | 2/20 | Median 20 months (range 0–267) | Brain 22; lung 19 |
| Ercolani, 2005 | 83 | 10 | Mean 55 (18–76) | 35 | NR | GI 18; breast 21; GU 15; soft tissue 10; other 19 | 11/72 | ≤1 year 34; >1 year 49 | Liver 83 |
| Farid, 2013 f,g | 97 | 11 | 51 (28–87) | 23 | LMS 97 | Uterine 51; extremity 16; retroperitoneum 9; pelvis 8; GI 6; GU 5; other 2 | 27/NR | NR | Uterine LMS h: liver 12.5%; lungs 81.3%; brain 6.3%; bones 12.5%; peritoneal 15.6%; lymph nodes 15.6%; others 25% |
| Goumard, 2018 | 126 | 62 | 54 (4–79) | 56 | LMS 62; LPS 14; hemangiopericytoma/SFT 9; vascular 7 (hemangioendothelioma 4; angiosarcoma 3); osteosarcoma 2; RMS 1; unclassified 26; NR 4 | Abdominal 105; extra-abdominal 21 | 44/82 | Median 12 months (range 0–298); >24 months 45 | Liver 126; extra-hepatic metastases 26 |
| Liebl, 2007 | 42 | 13 | Mean 50 (17–73) | 25 | Alveolar sarcoma 2; extraskeletal chondrosarcoma 4; fibrosarcoma 2; LMS 13; MPNST 3; MFH 7; SS 4; spindle cell sarcoma 2; other 5 | NR | 10/32 | Median 12 months; >18 months 16; ≤18 months 26 | Lung 42 |
| Lin, 2015 | 155 | 26 | Mean 47 (11–92) | 87 | LMS 26; osteosarcoma 21; SS 19; chondrosarcoma 14; LPS 10; undifferentiated sarcoma/MFH 7; Ewing’s sarcoma 5; MPNST 5; alveolar soft part sarcoma 3; RMS 2; other 25; NR 18 | Extremity 87; non-extremity 52; Visceral-gynecologic 16 | 23/132 | Median 20 months (range 1–268) | Lung 155 |
| Marudanayagam, 2010 | 36 | 20 | 58 (23–81) | 13 | Spindle cell sarcoma 1; angiosarcoma 1; osteosarcoma 1; carcinosarcoma 2; LPS 2; sarcomatoid renal cell tumor 4; GIST 5; LMS 20 | Lung 1; vena cava 2; retroperitoneum 2; leg 3; skin 1; breast 1; ovary 1; uterus 3; kidney 4; colon 1; small bowel 5; mesentery 6; stomach 6 | 13/23 | Median 17 months (range 0–322) | Liver 36; extra-hepatic metastases 11 |
| Rao, 2008 | 80 | 21 | 53 (9–77) | NR | Chondrosarcoma 21; LMS 22; Osteosarcoma 10; LPS 9; RMS 1; SS 4; unclassified sarcoma 9; other 4 | NR 51 | NR/NR | Median 32 months (range 0–127) | Spine 51; active extraspinal disease 35 |
| Smith, 2009 | 94 | 22 | 49 (9–75) | 47 | MFH 16; SS 18; LMS 22; LPS 12; other 26 | Extremity 47; retroperitoneum 6; uterus 12; other 29 | 18/76 | Median 15 months (range 0–176) | Lung 94; extra-pulmonary metastases 34 |
| Van Cann, 2018 c | 122 | 28 | 60 (19–84) | 45 | LMS 122 | Extremity 43; uterine 24; abdominal 23; vascular 13; GI 12; thoracic 5; cutaneous 2 | 38/84 | Median 14 months (range 1–140) | Lung 78; liver 33; bone 9; lung only 47; liver only 10; bone only 3 |
| Zacherl, 2011 | 15 | 9 | Mean 62 (SD ± 12) | 5 | Pleiomorphic sarcoma 1; LMS 9; chondrosarcoma 1; GIST 2; malignant schwannoma 1; malignant GI autonomic nerve tumor 1 | Small intestine 4; bone 3; pancreas 1; stomach 1; kidney 1; uterus 1; retroperitoneum 1; unknown primary 3 | 5/10 | Median 33 months (range 15–124) | Liver 15 |
| Zhang, 2015 | 27 | 12 | 42 (16–64) | 15 | LMS 12; SS 4; LPS 5; MFH 3; spindle cell sarcoma 3 | Extremity 27 | 3/24 | Median 31 months (range 0–104) | Liver 27 |
a Patients may be included more than once; b Data for patients undergoing first liver metastasectomy; c Data only available for 23 patients; d One patient with endometrial stromal sarcoma included in the data presented; e Sociodemographic and clinical data listed in this table are for the entire metastatic cohort and includes patients diagnosed with LMS and other cancer histologies; f The entire study cohort included LMS patients of which only a subgroup underwent metastasectomy; g Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics reported are for both metastatic and non-metastatic patients at the time of diagnosis of the primary tumor; h Sites of metastatic disease were only reported as percentages stratified by uterine versus extrauterine sites of primary tumor. These include both synchronous and metachronous metastatic disease; NR: Not reported; #: Number of patients.
Management of metastatic disease in studies reporting (A) and not reporting (B) these details for the LMS patients undergoing metastasectomy.
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| Burt, 2011 | Lung 31 | Mean 1.9 +/− 1.5 (range 1–8) | R0 28; R1 3 | Wedge 22; segmentectomy 2; lobectomy 7 | Perioperative chemotherapy 20 | Perioperative 7 | |
| Chen, 1998 | Liver 11 | Mean 2.6 (range 1–6) | Size of largest lesion mean 3.8 cm (range 1.1–10) | R0 6; R1/2 5 | Segmentectomy 5; lobectomy 4; complex resection 2 | Preoperative chemotherapy 1; postoperative chemotherapy 3 | Preoperative 1 |
| Faraj, 2015 | Liver 5; adrenal 1 | Multiple 5 | Sze of largest metastases median 12 cm (range 6–16) | R0 3; unknown 2 | Major hepatectomy 4; left adrenalectomy + right hepatectomy 1 | Postoperative chemotherapy 2 | NR |
| Kato, 2020 | Spine 10 | Solitary 10 | NR | NR | Single vertebral resection 5; two or three consecutive vertebral resections 5 | Preoperative chemotherapy 2; postoperative chemotherapy 6 | Preoperative 2; postoperative 1 |
| Kim, 2017 | Liver 10 | Solitary 6; multiple 4 | Maximum size of metastasis median 2.6 cm (range 0.9–3) | R0 9; R1 1 | Wedge 8; sectionectomy 1; right hepatectomy 1 | NR | NR |
| Lang, 2000 b | Liver 23 | Solitary 10; two metastases 3; three metastases 4; >three metastases 6 | Largest tumor diameter median 8 cm (range 2–25 cm) | R0 15; R1 3; R2 5 | Segmentectomies 12, major hepatectomies 7, extracorporeal resections 4 | NR | NR |
| Paramanathan, 2013 | Lung 13 | One metastasis 6; > one metastasis 7 | NR | R0 11; R1 1; unresectable at the time of surgery 1 | Wedge 7; segmentectomy 1; lobectomy 5; | Some patients had pre or postoperative chemotherapy c | NR |
| Ziewacz, 2012 | Spine 8 | NR | NR | NR | Intralesional 8 | Perioperative chemotherapy 7 | Perioperative 6 |
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| Anraku, 2004 | Lung 133 | NR | Pneumonectomy 3; bilobectomy 3; lobectomy 61 f; wedge or segmentectomy 84 f | NR | NR | ||
| Blackmon, 2009 | Lung 234; abdomen 12; bone 16; brain 7; extra-pulmonary thoracic 3; pelvis 3; retroperitoneum 2; soft tissue/skin 7; scalp 5; spine 8 | NR | R0 184; R1 21; R2 29 | For the first pulmonary resection only: Wedge 200; lobectomy, bilobectomy or sleeve 18; segmentectomy 15; pneumonectomy 1; Lung resection combined with lymph node dissection 7 | NR | NR | |
| Chudgar, 2017 | Lung 539 | NR | R0 490; R1 18; R2 31 | Wedge 422; lobectomy 107; pneumonectomy 10 | Preoperative chemotherapy 160; postoperative chemotherapy 53 | NR | |
| Deguchi, 2020 | Brain 22 | Single brain metastases 14; multiple brain metastases 8 | Maximum metastasis size median 39 mm (range 5–80) | GTR 21; STR 1 | NR | Postoperative chemotherapy 3; Postoperative tyrosine kinase inhibitor 3 | WBRT 10; Stereotactic 12 |
| Ercolani, 2005 | Liver 83 | Single metastases 58; multiple metastases 25 | <5 cm 50; >5 cm 33 | NR | Wedge resection 11; major hepatectomy 72 | Postoperative chemotherapy 26 | NR |
| Farid, 2013 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Goumard, 2018 | Liver 126; resection of all extra-hepatic metastases 17 | Maximum metastasis size 38 mm (range 3–330) | R0 107 | Major liver resection 68; associated RFA 17; associated abdominal extrahepatic resection 37; associated thoracic extrahepatic resection 9 | Preoperative chemotherapy 65; postoperative chemotherapy 33 | Postoperative radiation 2 | |
| Liebl, 2007 | Lung 42 | Solitary 16; multiple 26 | NR | NR | Preoperative chemotherapy 12 | NR | |
| Lin, 2015 | Lung 155 | Average 4 +/− 4; range 1–29 | Diameter of largest metastasis mean 2.9 cm +/− 3.0 (range 0.3–16) | R0 105; R1 13; R2 12; NR 25 | Wedge 102; segmentectomy 20; lobectomy 27; pneumonectomy 6 | Preoperative therapy not otherwise specified 93 | |
| Marudanayagam, 2010 | Liver 36; extra-hepatic metastases 11 | Median 1 (range 1–6) | Maximum diameter of metastasis 11 cm (range 1–26) | NR | Segmentectomy 6; wedge 8; hemihepatectomy 17; trisectionectomy 5 | NR | NR |
| Rao, 2008 | Spine 51 | NR | NR | NR | En bloc resection 6; intralesional resection 45 | NR | NR |
| Smith, 2009 | Lung 94; extra-pulmonary metastases 34 | One pulmonary metastasis 34; >1 pulmonary metastasis 60 | NR | R0 74; R1/2 20 | Wedge resection 74; lobectomy 17; pneumonectomy 3 | Postoperative chemotherapy 53 | Perioperative radiation 7; intraoperative radiation 7 |
| Van Cann, 2017 | Lung 28 | NR | NR | NR | NR | Perioperative systemic therapy 7 | Postoperative radiotherapy 1 |
| Zacherl, 2011 | Liver 15 | Solitary 5; multiple 10 | Median tumor diameter 60 mm (range 20–200) | R0 10; R1 3; R2 2 | Hemihepatectomy 9; Segmentectomy 4; wedge 3 | Postoperative chemotherapy 4 | NR |
| Zhang, 2015 | Liver 27 | NR | R0 21; R1 6 | Wedge 17; segmentectomy 8; Hemihepatectomy 2 | Postoperative chemotherapy 22 | NR | |
a Patients may be included more than once; b Data presented for patients undergoing first metastasectomy only; c The number of patients that preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy was not reported; d The management listed in this table are for the entire metastatic cohort and includes patients diagnosed with LMS and other types of cancers; e Patients may be included more than once; f Includes second resection of staged operation; NR: Not reported; R0: negative margins; R1: microscopically positive margin; R2: macroscopically/gross positive margin. NR: Not reported; #: Number of patients.
Intent and criteria for metastasectomy reported by studies.
| Study | Intent | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Anraku, 2004 | NR | NR |
| Blackmon, 2009 | Curative and palliative | Local control of the primary tumor. Immediate metastasectomy was recommended if there was a single or limited number of pulmonary metastases and a long DFI (minimum duration not specified) otherwise chemotherapy was recommended followed by metastasectomy if there was stable, responding, or slowly progressing disease. |
| Burt, 2011 | Curative | Control of all extra-thoracic disease and lack of a better alternative systemic therapy. |
| Chen, 1998 | NR | NR |
| Chudgar, 2017 | NR | NR |
| Deguchi, 2020 | Palliative | NR |
| Ercolani, 2005 | Curative | Metastatic disease limited to the liver. |
| Faraj, 2015 | Curative | NR |
| Farid, 2013 | NR | NR |
| Goumard, 2018 | NR | NR |
| Kato, 2020 | NR | Solitary metastasis of the spine involving three or fewer consecutive spinal levels, an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status (ECOG) equal to or less than three, stable disease, and three or fewer metastases in other organs. |
| Kim, 2017 | NR | NR |
| Lang, 2000 | NR | NR |
| Liebl, 2007 | NR | NR |
| Lin, 2015 | NR | Chemotherapy followed by metastasectomy was preferred in patients with a short disease-free interval, multiple lesions involving both lungs, high-grade sarcoma, or when preoperative chemotherapy was recommended for the primary tumor in synchronous disease. |
| Marudanayagam, 2010 | NR | Resectable with enough functional liver remanent, extrahepatic metastases a preclusion to hepatic resection. |
| Paramanathan, 2013 | Curative | Control of the primary tumor and no extra-thoracic disease. |
| Rao, 2008 | NR | NR |
| Smith, 2009 | Curative | NR |
| Van Cann, 2018 | Curative | NR |
| Zacherl, 2011 | NR | Resectable with enough functional liver remanent. |
| Zhang, 2015 | Curative | Metastatic disease limited to the liver. |
| Ziewacz, 2012 | Palliative | Life expectancy of at least three years and neurological deficits, refractory pain, radiographic instability, or tumor progression despite chemotherapy and radiation. |
NR: Not reported.
Pooled overall survival estimates.
| 1-Year Overall Survival | 2-Year Overall Survival | 3-Year Overall Survival | 4-Year Overall Survival | 5-Year Overall Survival | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Site of Metastasectomy | Total # | # At Risk | Rate (%) | # At Risk | Rate (%) | # At Risk | Rate (%) | # At Risk | Rate (%) | # At Risk | Rate (%) |
| Anraku, 2003 | Lung | 11 | 7 | 64 | 5 | 55 | 4 | 38 | 3 | 38 | 2 | 38 |
| Burt, 2011 | Lung | 31 | 29 | 98 | 25 | 87 | 19 | 72 | 16 | 64 | 13 | 52 |
| Chen, 1998 | Liver | 11 | 11 | 100 | 7 | 72 | 4 | 52 | 1 | 35 | 0 | 0 |
| Deguchi, 2020 | Brain | 5 | 2 | 80 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ercolani, 2005 | Liver | 10 | 8 | 80 | 6 | 60 | 6 | 60 | 5 | 50 | 3 | 30 |
| Faraj, 2015 | Liver | 5 | 3 | 60 | 2 | 40 | 1 | 20 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Farid, 2013 | Other | 11 | 11 | 100 | 9 | 100 | 7 | 78 | 7 | 78 | 6 | 67 |
| Goumard, 2018 | Liver | 55 | 52 | 98 | 36 | 89 | 26 | 69 | 19 | 58 | 17 | 52 |
| Kato, 2020 | Spine | 10 | 9 | 90 | 7 | 70 | 6 | 60 | 5 | 50 | 4 | 40 |
| Kim, 2017 | Liver | 10 | 8 | 100 | 2 | 58 | 2 | 58 | 1 | 58 | 1 | 58 |
| Lang, 2000 | Liver | 23 | 17 | 74 | 13 | 57 | 8 | 35 | 4 | 17 | 3 | 13 |
| Paramanathan, 2013 | Lung | 13 | 12 | 92 | 11 | 92 | 8 | 76 | 6 | 66 | 4 | 66 |
| Zacherl, 2011 | Liver | 9 | 5 | 56 | 5 | 56 | 3 | 33 | 1 | 11 | 1 | 11 |
| Ziewacz, 2012 | Spine | 8 | 3 | 57 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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#: Number of patients.
Figure 1Pooled overall survival by site of metastasectomy.