Chemoembolization facilitates limb salvage surgery in stage IIi soft tissue sarcoma
Papanastassiou, I.; Ioannou, M.; Magoulas, D.; Lalos, S.; Athanassiou, A.E.; Ziras, N.; Thanopoulou, E.; Demertzis, N.
Journal of Buon Official Journal of the Balkan Union of Oncology 14(3): 507-510
2009
ISSN/ISBN: 1107-0625 PMID: 19810146 Document Number: 635011
A 26 year-old male was referred to our unit because of a stage III soft tissue sarcoma in the shoulder girdle-axillary area and reduced forearm-distal arm strength. Imaging studies revealed that the tumor encompassed the axillary artery and brachial plexus. We chemoembolized it using vincristine, adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (VAC) plus gel foam and performed limb salvage surgery (LSS) afterwards. The patient received adjuvant chemotherapy (ifosfamide/mesna, adriamycin, and dacarbazine/MAID) and finally radiation therapy (RT; 6500 cGy total dose). Thirty-six months after the operation the patient remains free of disease, without local recurrence and excellent neurological recovery and functional rehabilitation. In stage III soft tissue sarcomas, especially in proximity with major nerve/arterial bundles, a multimodality approach is mandatory; chemoembolization is very effective in shrinking the tumor and defining its margins so as to make feasible a LSS.