Purpose: Localized adult high-grade soft tissue sarcomas (STS) usually require multimodality treatment including surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and hyperthermia. If maximal preoperative tumor-shrinkage is envisaged, neoadjuvant chemotherapy + radiation (CRT) is often applied, however at the expense of relatively high toxicities and increased postoperative complication rates. This study aims to compare preoperative CRT with neoadjuvant chemotherapy + regional hyperthermia (HCT) regarding histopathological response, toxicity and outcome. Methods: In this retrospective analysis, 61 consecutive high-grade STS patients treated between 2009 and 2016 were included. All patients were treated within a prospective treatment protocol. 28 patients received neoadjuvant CRT 33 patients HCT. CRT consisted of four cycles doxorubicin/ifosfamide and two cycles ifosfamide concomitant to 50.4 Gray external beam radiotherapy. HCT consisted of 4–6 cycles doxorubicin/ifosfamide with deep regional hyperthermia administered bi-weekly during each cycle. Association of treatment modality with overall survival (OS), local control (LC) and freedom from distant metastases (FFDM) was evaluated by Kaplan–Meier and log-rank analyses. Results: The overall patient characteristics were well balanced. Histopathological tumor response did not differ significantly between both groups (p =.67), neither did higher-grade toxicities during neoadjuvant treatment. Wound dehiscence (p =.018) and surgical hospital re-admissions (p
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Zschaeck, S., Wust, P., Melcher, I., Nadobny, J., Rau, D., Striefler, J., … Ghadjar, P. (2018). Neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus radiation versus chemotherapy plus regional hyperthermia in high-grade soft tissue sarcomas: a retrospective comparison. International Journal of Hyperthermia, 35(1), 314–322. https://doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2018.1498137
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