B K Temeck1, L H Wexler, S M Steinberg, L L McClure, M A Horowitz, H I Pass. 1. Thoracic Oncology Section, Pediatric Oncology Branch, and Biostatistics and Data Management Section, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role for reoperative pulmonary metastasectomy in patients with "pediatric sarcomas" (osteosarcoma, nonrhabdomyosarcoma-soft tissue sarcoma, and Ewing's sarcoma) is undefined. METHODS: We reviewed our results for patients with these histologic presentations (median age, 17.5 years; range, 6 to 32 years) having two (70), three (27), or four (10) metastasectomies between January 1965 and March 1995 to define postresection survival and potential prognostic factors. Simple wedges (88 thoracotomies, 84%) were performed more frequently than anatomic (17 thoracotomies, 16%) resections. RESULTS: With a median potential follow-up of 12.7 years, median survival was 2.25, 3.60, and 0.96 years from the second, third, and fourth explorations, respectively. Primary tumor site, sex, histology, age, maximal metastasis size, and systemic chemotherapy did not influence survival. Resectability was the most important prognostic factor (5.6 versus 0.7 years, 5.2 versus 2.5 years, 2.2 versus 0.2 years, resectable versus unresectable, median survival from second, third, and fourth thoracotomy, respectively). Unresectability, disease-free interval less than 6 months between initial (ie, first) pulmonary resection and the second thoracotomy, and two or more preoperative nodules noted on the right were simultaneously negatively associated with survival from the second thoracotomy. Unresectability or finding two or more metastases negatively affected survival from the third thoracotomy. CONCLUSIONS: These data imply that repeat metastasectomy can salvage a subset of patients with sarcomatous pediatric histologic presentations who retain favorable prognostic determinants.
BACKGROUND: The role for reoperative pulmonary metastasectomy in patients with "pediatric sarcomas" (osteosarcoma, nonrhabdomyosarcoma-soft tissue sarcoma, and Ewing's sarcoma) is undefined. METHODS: We reviewed our results for patients with these histologic presentations (median age, 17.5 years; range, 6 to 32 years) having two (70), three (27), or four (10) metastasectomies between January 1965 and March 1995 to define postresection survival and potential prognostic factors. Simple wedges (88 thoracotomies, 84%) were performed more frequently than anatomic (17 thoracotomies, 16%) resections. RESULTS: With a median potential follow-up of 12.7 years, median survival was 2.25, 3.60, and 0.96 years from the second, third, and fourth explorations, respectively. Primary tumor site, sex, histology, age, maximal metastasis size, and systemic chemotherapy did not influence survival. Resectability was the most important prognostic factor (5.6 versus 0.7 years, 5.2 versus 2.5 years, 2.2 versus 0.2 years, resectable versus unresectable, median survival from second, third, and fourth thoracotomy, respectively). Unresectability, disease-free interval less than 6 months between initial (ie, first) pulmonary resection and the second thoracotomy, and two or more preoperative nodules noted on the right were simultaneously negatively associated with survival from the second thoracotomy. Unresectability or finding two or more metastases negatively affected survival from the third thoracotomy. CONCLUSIONS: These data imply that repeat metastasectomy can salvage a subset of patients with sarcomatous pediatric histologic presentations who retain favorable prognostic determinants.
Authors: Jason W Denbo; Liang Zhu; DeoKumar Srivastava; Dennis C Stokes; Saumini Srinivasan; Melissa M Hudson; Kirsten K Ness; Leslie L Robison; Michael Neel; Bhaskar Rao; Fariba Navid; Andrew M Davidoff; Daniel M Green Journal: J Am Coll Surg Date: 2014-03-04 Impact factor: 6.113
Authors: Amos H P Loh; Fariba Navid; Chong Wang; Armita Bahrami; Jianrong Wu; Michael D Neel; Bhaskar N Rao Journal: Ann Surg Oncol Date: 2014-02-21 Impact factor: 5.344
Authors: Neel P Chudgar; Murray F Brennan; Kay See Tan; Rodrigo R Munhoz; Sandra P D'Angelo; Manjit S Bains; James Huang; Bernard J Park; Prasad S Adusumilli; William D Tap; David R Jones Journal: Ann Thorac Surg Date: 2017-11-02 Impact factor: 4.330