Factors affecting survival in retroperitoneal sarcomas treated with upfront surgery: A real-world study by Turkish Oncology Group

Göster/ Aç
Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessTarih
2021Yazar
Akagündüz, BaranAkın Telli, Tuğba
Yıldırım, Hasan Çağrı
Göksu, Sema Sezgin
Demir, Nazan
Hafızoğlu, Emre
Özer, Muhammet
Çevik, Gökçen Tuğba
Sakin, Abdullah
Göktaş Aydın, Sabin
Şengül Samancı, Nilay
Özyurt, Neslihan
Atçı, Muhammed Mustafa
Ayhan, Murat
Turan, Merve
Sarıyar, Nisanur
Karaçin, Cengiz
Kılıçkap, Saadettin
Paydaş, Semra
Doğan, Mutlu
Üst veri
Tüm öğe kaydını gösterKünye
Akagündüz, B., Akın Telli, T., Yıldırım, H. Ç., Göksu, S. S., Demir, N., Hafızoğlu, E. ... Doğan, M. (2021). Factors affecting survival in retroperitoneal sarcomas treated with upfront surgery: A real-world study by Turkish Oncology Group. UHOD - Uluslararası Hematoloji-Onkoloji Dergisi, 31(2), 92-98. https://dx.doi.org/10.4999/uhod.215190Özet
Retroperitoneal sarcomas (RPS) account for approximately 15% of all soft tissue sarcomas (STS) and encompass a heterogeneous group of tumors with limited multimodality treatment options. Surgical resection with negative margins remains the standard primary treatment for patients with localized RPS. In this multicenter study, we aimed to demonstrate the real-world data on factors affecting survival in RPS treated with upfront surgery. We included a total of 197 patients who underwent curative-intent resection of a primary non-metastatic RPS between 2000-2020 at ten experienced medical oncology departments in Turkey. The median follow-up was 33 months. The median age of patients was 53 years, 57.4% of patients were female. Univariate analysis revealed that; tumor size, grade, necrosis, resection margin status, were factors affecting recurrence-free survival (RFS) (p= 0.002, p= 0.044, p= 0,024, p= 0.003 respectively). Age, tumor size, stage, resection margin status were factors affecting overall survival (OS) (p= 0.038, p= 0.001, p= 0.032, p< 0.001, respectively). In multivariate analysis, tumor size and resection margin status were independent factors affecting RFS and OS (all p-values < 0.05). Our study demonstrated that tumor size, and resection margin status were the main factors affecting survival in resected RFS. In comparison, adjuvant chemotherapy (CT), radiotherapy (RT), or multimodality treatment did not show OS and RFS advantages. We believe that advances in the molecular characterization of these tumors might help clinicians to detect the best candidates for adjuvant therapies in RPS.