Abstract

A prospective study was carried out to determine the results of chemotherapy as an adjuvant to surgery in the initial treatment of adult primary soft tissue sarcomas. The results were compared with those in a group of patients with similar histologic types of primary sarcoma treated by surgery alone. The chemotherapy regimen consisted of adriamycin, 60 mg/m2 intravenously on Day 1, and DTIC, 250 mg/m2 on Days 1 through 5. The cycle was repeated every 22 days. The total dose of adriamycin was 500 mg/m2; the DTIC was continued for 1 year. The adjuvant chemotherapy group consisted of 113 patients (group one) and the concurrent surgical resection group consisted of 144 patients (group two). In group one, 53 tumors were T1 and 60 tumors were T2; 67 of the tumors were grade 3 and 46 were grade 4. In group two, 65 had T1 and 79 had T2 tumors; 82 tumors were grade 3 and 62 were grade 4. The anatomic location and histologic types were similar in both groups. Seventy-seven (77%) of the 113 patients in group one lived disease free for 2 years, compared with 59% of the 144 patients treated by resection alone. Of the patients eligible for 5-year survival analysis, 74% were disease free in the adjuvant chemotherapy group, compared to 50% in the surgical group. The incidence of local recurrence was about the same in both groups. From a histologic standpoint, malignant fibrous histiocytomas and myogenic sarcomas appeared to benefit most with use of the use of the two-drug regimen used here, and the least favorable response was in liposarcomas and fibrosarcomas. In other histologic types, the role of adjuvant chemotherapy needs further clarification.

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