SOFT-TISSUE SARCOMAS OF THE DISTAL EXTREMITIES

  • 1 April 1986
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 99  (4) , 392-398
Abstract
Multimodality therapy and limb salvage procedures constitute a significant advance in the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma of the extremity. The applicability of these procedures to soft tissue sarcoma of the distal extremities was evaluated in a retrospective study of 159 such cases treated during a 10-year period. Thirty-seven patients were treated by operation alone, 57 had operation and adjuvant chemotherapy, and 65 had multimodal therapy. The distal extremities are unusual sites for soft tissue sarcomas and accounted for only 20% of our patients with sarcoma. The majority of patients were younger than 50 years and the sex distribution was approximately equal. The major histologic types were synovial cell sarcoma (18.2%), fibrosarcoma (15%), liposarcoma (13.8%), and rhabdomyosarcoma (13.8%). The 5-year survival rate was 72% iwth multimodality therapy, 72% for operation and chemotherapy, and 51% for operation alone. The local recurrence rate was 13% with operation alone, 9% with operation and adjuvant chemotherapy, and 12% with multimodality therapy. Based on our review, wide local excision and adjuvant chemotherapy proved to be as effective as multimodal therapy.