Nonreferral of possible soft tissue sarcomas in adults: a dangerous omission in policy
Keywords: 
Soft tissue
Sarcoma
Issue Date: 
2009
Publisher: 
Hindawi
ISSN: 
1369-1643
Note: 
Creative Commons Attribution License
Citation: 
Abellan JF, Lamo de Espinosa J,M., Duart J, Patiño-García A, Martin-Algarra S, Martínez-Monge R, et al. Nonreferral of possible soft tissue sarcomas in adults: a dangerous omission in policy. Sarcoma 2009; 827912-827912.
Abstract
Introduction. The aim of this study is to compare outcomes in three groups of STS patients treated in our specialist centre: patients referred immediately after an inadequate initial treatment, patients referred after a local recurrence, and patients referred directly, prior to any treatment. Patients and methods. We reviewed all our nonmetastatic extremity-STS patients with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. We compared three patient groups: those referred directly to our centre (group A), those referred after an inadequate initial excision (group B), and patients with local recurrence (group C). Results. The study included 174 patients. Disease-free survival was 73%, 76%, and 28% in groups A, B, and C, respectively (P < .001). Depth, size, and histologic grade influenced the outcome in groups A and B, but not in C. Conclusion. Initial wide surgical treatment is the main factor that determines local control, being even more important than the known intrinsic prognostic factors of tumour size, depth, and histologic grade. The influence on outcome of initial wide local excision (WLE), which is made possible by referral to a specialist centre, is paramount.

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