Feasibility of limb salvage and survival in soft tissue sarcomas

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Abstract

One hundred nine consecutive patients with soft tissue sarcomas were treated in the period 1977 through 1983. Of 85 patients with extremity sarcomas, only 3 patients (4%) were managed with amputation, whereas in the previous decade, 40% of such patients were treated with amputation in our institute. The current 5‐year survival rate is 63%; in the previous decade it was 45%. In the current series, for extremity locations, patients with minimum surgical margins of 2 cm or greater and no further local therapy had a 5‐year local recurrence rate of 17%, whereas those with minimum surgical margins of less than 2 cm and who were treated with adjuvant postoperative radiation had a local recurrence rate of 7%. In the previous period, the local recurrence rate was 30% after wide resection and 66.6% after local excision. With a combination of modalities, limb salvage can be practiced currently in the majority of patients with extremity soft tissue sarcomas without any adverse effect on recurrence rates and survival. Copyright © 1986 American Cancer Society

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APA

Karakousis, C. P., Emrich, L. J., Rao, U., & Krishnamsetty, R. M. (1986). Feasibility of limb salvage and survival in soft tissue sarcomas. Cancer, 57(3), 484–491. https://doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(19860201)57:3<484::AID-CNCR2820570314>3.0.CO;2-K

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