Abstract

Between April 1990 and December 1994, we treated 24 patients with telangiectatic osteosarcoma (TO) of the extremities with neoadjuvant chemotherapy using 2 protocols. Surgery consisted of limb salvage in 21 patients and amputation or rotation plasty in 3. The histologic response to chemotherapy was good (90% or more tumor necrosis) in 23 patients, of whom 12 had total necrosis. With a mean follow-up of 74 (60-96) months, 20 patients remained continuously free of disease and 4 relapsed with lung metastases. There were no local recurrences. Comparing these results to the ones achieved in 269 contemporary patients with conventional osteosarcoma of the extremities using the same protocols for chemotherapy, we found a significantly better histologic response to chemotherapy (96% vs 68% of good histologic response; p = 0.004) and disease-free survival (83% vs 55%; p = 0.01) in the TO group. We conclude that TO, once considered a lethal tumor, seems to be even more sensitive to chemotherapy than conventional osteosarcoma, and that most of these patients may be cured without amputation.

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