Soft tissue sarcomas

被引:4
作者
Alvegard, T
机构
[1] UNIV TUBINGEN, TUBINGEN, GERMANY
[2] CANC SOC, STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN
[3] CTR ONCOL, LUND, SWEDEN
[4] UNIV LUND HOSP, DEPT ORTHOPED, S-22185 LUND, SWEDEN
关键词
D O I
10.3109/02841869609101671
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
This synthesis of the literature on radiotherapy for sarcomas originating in the body's soft, supportive tissues, ie, muscle, connective tissue, and fatty tissue is based on 71 scientific articles, including 4 randomized studies, 5 prospective studies, and 26 retrospective studies. These studies involve 3444 patients. Over 90% of patients with soft tissue sarcomas in the arms and legs can be treated in a way that preserves the extremities. Subcutaneous and intramuscular sarcomas can be treated surgically with little functional loss or risk for local recurrence without adjuvant radiotherapy. To avoid amputation, surgery is often combined with radiotherapy for treatment of local relapse. Adequate surgical margins are usually difficult to achieve for head/neck tumors and retroperitoneal tumors, and therefore surgery is often combined with radiotherapy to reduce the risk for local relapse. Pre- and postoperative radiotherapy are similar (1, 2). A disadvantage of preoperative radiotherapy is that it reduces the opportunity for exact diagnosis and determining morphobiologic sarcoma parameters. To further improve treatment results for advanced sarcomas, it is necessary to introduce other fractionation schedules, mainly hyperfractionation (1). This places greater demands on radiotherapy, mainly for staff resources. Combining radiotherapy and local intraarterial chemotherapy involves greater risks for complications and has not shown better treatment results than pre- or postoperative radiotherapy alone, and it is not recommended as standard treatment for soft tissue sarcomas. Intraoperative treatment methods should be targeted for further study and development.
引用
收藏
页码:117 / 122
页数:6
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