Affiliation:
1. From the Division of Gynecologic Oncology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Abstract
Overview: Leiomyosarcoma, the most frequent pure uterine sarcoma, is an aggressive tumor with a tendency toward early relapse. Survival for patients with recurrent disease is poor. In contrast, endometrial stromal sarcoma, the second most common uterine sarcoma, is a more indolent malignancy with a tendency toward recurrence after a long latency period. The relative infrequency of both diseases makes the study and standardization of treatment for recurrent disease challenging. Treatment of recurrence with cytotoxic chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or hormone therapy produces modest to poor response rates. Surgical resection is one treatment modality offering the potential for cure and perhaps a more durable response than is seen with medical management. Although initial studies focused on pulmonary metastasectomy in recurrent soft tissue sarcoma, an increasingly large body of data specifically evaluating outcomes after both thoracic and extrathoracic metastasectomy in patients with recurrent uterine sarcoma is now available. Though no prospective trials have been conducted, retrospective comparisons of chemotherapy or radiation therapy with surgery for recurrent uterine sarcoma suggest improvement in disease-specific survival for the surgery group. Clearly defined factors are associated with better prognosis after surgical resection of recurrence, including a prolonged disease-free interval and complete resection of disease. In properly selected women, surgery and even repeated metastasectomy for recurrent disease may improve survival and should be considered.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
7 articles.
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