Abstract

We prospectively followed 106 consecutive patients referred for surgical treatment of nonmetastatic subcutaneous soft tissue sarcoma to assess whether prior surgical manipulation had an impact on local control and/or disease-free survival. 10 patients had no previous surgical treatment; 11 had only a previous biopsy, 75 had a previous attempted excision, and 10 were referred after the tumor had recurred locally. Histologic grade was inversely associated with overall survival and disease-free survival. Of the 75 patients with previous attempted excision, 22 (29%) had gross residual disease, 27 (36%) had microscopic residual disease, and 26 (35%) had no identifiable residual disease. The 5-year metastasis-free survival was 88%. Local control was obtained in 100% of patients without previous surgical manipulation, 89% of those with previous surgery, and 60% of those who were referred after a local relapse had been recognized. Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed that larger tumor size negatively impacted disease-free survival in those patients who were treated with previous attempted excision. Of those patients with tumors 4 cm or larger and a previous unplanned sarcoma excision, disease-free survival was lower than in those patients referred without previous attempted excision. Prognostic study, Level I-2 (prospective study). See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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