Results of multimodality therapy of resectable soft-tissue sarcomas of the retroperitoneum. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Thirty-seven patients with resectable retroperitoneal sarcomas were studied prospectively to determine the efficacy of aggressive multimodality treatments. No patients was lost to follow-up, which ranged from 11 to 85 months (median 29 months). All patients received radiotherapy and some received postoperative chemotherapy (doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and high-dose methotrexate). A subset of 15 patients were entered into a prospective, randomized study testing the efficacy of adjuvant chemotherapy (eight received chemotherapy; seven did not). Two-year actuarial survival rates were inferior in the chemotherapy arm (100% versus 47%; p = 0.06), but the small number of patients precluded drawing definitive conclusions from this randomized study alone. Among the entire 37 patients (21 received chemotherapy; 16 did not) the actuarial 3-year survival rate was 43% and appeared unaffected by chemotherapy. Two patients suffered doxorubicin infiltration, three sustained cardiac toxicity, two developed cyclophosphamide-induced cystitis, and three withstood transient, severe bone marrow suppression. Eight patients suffered severe radiation enteritis, and one patient died after bowel resection for this problem. Thus the chemotherapy regimen we administered did not appear to improve survival but was associated with major morbidity. Radiotherapy was also associated with major complications, and since all patients received radiotherapy, it remains to be established if this modality is beneficial in improving survival.

publication date

  • March 1, 1985

Research

keywords

  • Retroperitoneal Neoplasms
  • Sarcoma

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0022347018

PubMed ID

  • 3975851

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 97

issue

  • 3