Abstract

One-hundred and eighty patients undergoing limb-salvage surgery for soft-tissue sarcoma from 1986 to 1991 were assessed retrospectively for risk factors associated with major wound-healing complications. Twenty-three of 137 patients (16 percent) treated with primary direct wound closure sustained complications. In univariate analysis, the cross-sectional area of tumor resection, the use of preoperative irradiation, the width of the skin excision, a history of smoking, and a history of diabetes and/or vascular disease were associated with wound failure. Multivariate analysis revealed that preoperative irradiation (p = 0.04) and resection diameter (p = 0.017) accounted for the risk of complications. Eighteen additional patients were treated empirically with distant vascularized tissue transfer following preoperative irradiation because of concerns regarding potential wound complications. The lower complication rate in this group suggested that vascularized tissue transfer may be beneficial in lowering wound complication rates.

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