Abstract

e23554 Background: As soft tissue sarcomas are rare, it is not uncommon that soft tissue sarcoma excision is performed without the required preoperative imaging, staging, or wide resection margins for sarcomas. This study investigated the characteristics of unplanned excision and analyzed the recurrence, life expectancy, and proper treatment for unplanned excision. Methods: Patients who underwent unplanned excision at another institution followed by additional wide excision at our hospital from January 2002 to December 2018 were identified. Forty-two patients met our criteria. The relationships between variables and oncological outcomes were statistically analyzed. Results: The mean age was 57.3 years (15–85 years). Sixty-nine percent (29 in 42) of tumors was in the subcutaneous tissue. Six tumors were located in the upper extremity, 24 in the lower extremity, and 12 in the trunk. Surgical margin after additional wide excision was positive in 10 cases and negative in 32 cases. Pathological examination of specimen showed 34 of 42 cases (80.9%) had residual tumor after primary tumor excision. Fourteen patients (33.3%) required reconstructions. Of the 42 patients, one had both preoperative MRI and biopsy, while nine patients underwent MRI only. Among them, only one patient had enhanced MRI. Ten patients had chemotherapy while no patient had radiotherapy over the follow-up period. The mean tumor size was 5.3 cm (0.8-20 cm). The unplanned excisions were performed by orthopaedic surgeons in 18 cases, by general surgeons in eight, by plastic surgeons in seven, by other surgeons in four. Four primary surgeries (9.5%) were performed in a sarcoma center. On multivariate analysis, positive surgical margin (HR 4.04, 95% CI 1.57-10.4, p < 0.01) was significantly associated with lower 5-year recurrence-free survival. Conclusions: First, to reduce the number of cases of unplanned excision, it should be recognized that small, subcutaneous tumors may be malignant. Second, it is considered that the high recurrence rate with positive margins after additional wide excision might be due to failure to recognize the nature and extent of the tumor without enhanced MRI and biopsy before primary surgery. Finally, surgeons should be aware that positive margin at additional wide excision is an independent risk factor for local recurrence.[Table: see text]

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