Abstract

Tumor infiltration in soft tissue sarcoma (STS) is known to correlate with an inadequate surgical margin and poor local control. This study aims to determine whether the radiological infiltration (R-inf) in STS cor relates with histological infiltration (H-inf) and to devise methods to determine a resection margin for infiltrative STS. We reviewed the medical records of 145 patients with high-grade STS. We measured the R-inf on short-T1 inversion recovery or gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed (GdFS) magnetic resonance imaging. In addition, we assessed H-inf as the infiltrative growth of atypical tumor cells. The local control rate (LCR) was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method. A statistically significant positive correlation was found between H-inf and R-inf (P < 0.0001). The R-inf obtained from the GdFS images exhibited a stronger correlation with H-inf than that obtained from the short-T1 inversion recovery images. Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed that a positive H-inf significantly correlated with a poor LCR. Moreover, the contaminated margins, which included intrainfiltration margins, significantly correlated with a poor LCR compared with the wide margins. R-inf as assessed by the GdFS images significantly correlates with H-inf, suggesting that we should exercise the infiltrative STS beyond their R-infs detected by the GdFS images.

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