The Impact of Resection Margins in Primary Resection of High-Grade Soft Tissue Sarcomas: How Far Is Far Enough?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Staging and Grading
2.2. Follow-Up and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Variables
2.4. Statistics
3. Results
3.1. Prognostic Factors for Local Recurrence (LR)
3.2. Prognostic Factors for Distant Metastasis (DM)
3.3. Prognostic Factors for Overall Survival (OS)
4. Discussion
Limitations of Our Study
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
WHO | World Health Organization |
STS | Soft tissue sarcoma |
ESMO | European Society of Medical Oncology |
LR | Local recurrence |
DM | Distant metastasis |
OS | Overall survival |
GIST | Gastrointestinal stromal tumor |
DMFS | Distant-metastasis-free survival |
LRFS | Local-recurrence-free survival |
FNCLCC | Fédération Nationale des Centres de Lutte Contre le Cancer |
Adj. | Adjuvant |
Neoadj. | Neoadjuvant |
RTx | Radiotherapy |
CTx | Chemotherapy |
UICC | International Union against Cancer |
AJCC | American Joint Committee on Cancer |
TMCC | Toronto margin context classification |
CI | Confidence interval |
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Histological Subtype | G2 | G3 | LR | DM | All |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
All patients * | 55 | 143 | 64 (32%) | 75 (37%) | 203 (100%) |
Undifferentiated sarcoma (UPS) ** | 17 | 79 | 34 (35%) | 35 (36%) | 97 (48%) |
Liposarcoma * | 18 | 17 | 6 (17%) | 10 (28%) | 36 (18%) |
Myxofibrosarcoma | 8 | 16 | 9 (38%) | 6 (25%) | 24 (12%) |
Synovial sarcoma | 5 | 10 | 5 (33%) | 9 (60%) | 15 (7%) |
Rhabdomyosarcoma | 1 | 8 | 3 (33%) | 4 (44%) | 9 (4%) |
Leiomyosarcoma | 2 | 5 | 3 (43%) | 5 (71%) | 7 (3%) |
Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) | 0 | 4 | 0 (0%) | 1 (25%) | 4 (2%) |
Fibrosarcoma | 1 | 1 | 2 (100%) | 1 (50%) | 2 (1%) |
Clear cell sarcoma | 0 | 1 | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (1%) |
Others * | 3 | 2 | 2 (50%) | 4 (50%) | 8 (4%) |
Margin Width | Positive | 0.1–1 mm | >1–5 mm | >5 mm | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | |||||
- Male | 6 (46%) | 38 (57%) | 34 (49%) | 18 (67%) | 107 (53%) |
- Female | 7 (54%) | 29 (43%) | 36 (51%) | 9 (33%) | 96 (47%) |
Age at surgery (median and range) | 71 (19–81) years | 62 (21–91) years | 61 (19–83) years | 58 (22–87) years | 60 (19–91) years |
Duration of surgery (median and range) | 173 (85–480) min | 114 (30–509) min | 99 (39–458) min | 105 (34–235) min | 105 (30–509) min |
Depth | |||||
- Superficial | 1 (8%) | 7 (11%) | 7 (10%) | 7 (26%) | 25 (13%) |
- Subfascial | 12 (92%) | 56 (89%) | 62 (90%) | 20 (74%) | 169 (87%) |
Size of tumor (median) | 138 (23–288) mm | 103 (22–251) mm | 88 (27–301) mm | 88 (8–175) mm | 96(8–301) mm |
Exulcerating | |||||
- Yes | 0 | 2 (3%) | 1 (1%) | 3 (11%) | 6 (3%) |
- No | 13 (100%) | 65 (97%) | 69 (99%) | 24 (89%) | 197 (97%) |
Tumor site | |||||
- Right arm | 3 (23%) | 4 (6%) | 4 (6%) | 5 (19%) | 17 (8%) |
- Left arm | 1 (8%) | 11 (16%) | 4 (6%) | 1 (4%) | 20 (10%) |
- Right leg | 3 (23%) | 30 (44%) | 30 (43%) | 10 (37%) | 81 (40%) |
- Left leg | 4 (31%) | 20 (30%) | 28 (40%) | 9 (33%) | 74 (37%) |
- Trunk | 2 (15%) | 2 (3%) | 4 (6%) | 2 (7%) | 11 (5%) |
Tumor stage | |||||
- II | 1 (8%) | 7 (11%) | 10 (14%) | 5 (19%) | 27 (14%) |
- IIIA | 3 (23%) | 27 (44%) | 37 (54%) | 13 (48%) | 88 (46%) |
- IIIB | 9 (69%) | 28 (45%) | 21 (31%) | 9 (33%) | 76(40%) |
Radiotherapy (RTx) | |||||
- Adj. | 6 (46%) | 52 (78%) | 58 (83%) | 20 (74%) | 155 (76%) |
- Neoadj. | 4 (31%) | 6 (9%) | 4 (6%) | 1 (4%) | 17 (8%) |
- No | 3 (23%) | 9 (13%) | 8 (11%) | 6 (22%) | 31 (15%) |
Chemotherapy (CTx) | |||||
- Adj. | - | 18 (28%) | 25 (37%) | 14 (52%) | 66 (33%) |
- Neoadj. | 1 (8%) | 2 (3%) | 4 (6%) | 0 (0%) | 9 (5%) |
- No | 12 (92%) | 44 (69%) | 39 (57%) | 13 (48%) | 122 (62%) |
Wound-healing complication | |||||
- Yes | 5 (42%) | 14 (21%) | 13 (19%) | 7 (26%) | 45 (23%) |
- No | 7 (58% | 51 (79%) | 56 (81%) | 20 (74%) | 154 (77%) |
Obesity/BMI (kg/m2) | |||||
- <18.5 | - | 1 (2%) | 2 (3%) | - | 3 (2%) |
- 18.5–24.9 | 5 (39%) | 22 (33%) | 20 (31%) | 7 (28%) | 61 (33%) |
- 25–29.9 | 5 (39%) | 27 (42%) | 23 (36%) | 13 (52%) | 73 (40%) |
- 30–34.9 | 1 (8%) | 11 (17%) | 14 (22%) | - | 31 (17%) |
- 35–39.9 | 1 (8%) | 2 (3%) | 2 (3%) | 4 (16%) | 10 (5%) |
- >40 | 1 (8%) | 1 (2%) | 3 (4%) | 1 (4%) | 6 (3%) |
Smoking | |||||
- Yes | 3 (25%) | 14 (22%) | 12 (19%) | 4 (16%) | 36 (20%) |
- No | 9 (75%) | 49 (78%) | 50 (81%) | 21 (84%) | 144 (80%) |
High blood pressure | |||||
- Yes | 7 (54%) | 32 (49%) | 29 (45%) | 15 (58%) | 90 (48%) |
- No | 6 (46%) | 33 (51%) | 36 (55%) | 11 (42%) | 98 (52%) |
Local recurrence | |||||
- Yes | 11 (85%) | 27 (40%) | 19 (27%) | 4 (15%) | 64 (31%) |
- No | 2 (15%) | 40 (60%) | 51 (73%) | 23 (85%) | 139 (69%) |
Distant metastasis | |||||
- Yes | 8 (67%) | 30 (47%) | 23 (34%) | 9 (33%) | 75 (38%) |
- No | 4 (33%) | 34 (53%) | 45 (66%) | 18 (67%) | 121 (62%) |
Follow-up (median and range) | 13 (3–78) months | 37 (1–154) months | 45 (3–151) months | 55 (24–152) months | 46 (1–170) months |
Overall survival (median and range) | 22 (4–153) months | 119 (2–191) months | 98 (6–192) months | 124 (28–189) months | 96 (2–192) months |
Covariates | Exp(b) | 95% CI of Exp(b) | p |
---|---|---|---|
Age at surgery | 1.017 | 1.000–1.035 | 0.048 |
Margin width in mm | |||
0 | 1 | <0.001 | |
0.1–1 | 0.304 | 0.143–0.646 | 0.002 |
>1–5 | 0.178 | 0.079–0.401 | <0.001 |
>5 | 0.054 | 0.016–0.183 | <0.001 |
Radiotherapy | |||
No. RTx | 1 | <0.001 | |
Neoadj. RTx | 1.229 | 0.564–2.678 | 0.605 |
Adj. RTx | 0.232 | 0.126–0.426 | <0.001 |
Covariates | Exp(b) | 95% CI of Exp(b) | p |
---|---|---|---|
Margin status | |||
R0 | 1 | 0.335 | |
R1 | 1.477 | 0.669–3.261 | |
Radiotherapy | |||
No RTx | 1 | 0.373 | |
Neoadj. RTx | 1.439 | 0.547–3.783 | 0.164 |
Adj. RTx | 1.735 | 0.798–3.772 | 0.461 |
Chemotherapy | |||
No CTx | 1 | 0.026 | |
Neoadj. CTx | 1.627 | 0.635–4.167 | 0.311 |
Adj. CTx | 0.491 | 0.269–0.895 | 0.020 |
Local recurrence | |||
No | 1 | <0.001 | |
Yes | 3.328 | 1.947–5.551 |
Covariates | Exp(b) | 95% CI of Exp(b) | p |
---|---|---|---|
Age at surgery | 1.018 | 1.000–1.037 | 0.056 |
Margin status | |||
R0 | 1 | 0.356 | |
R1 | 1.482 | 0.643–3.416 | |
Radiotherapy | |||
No RTx | 1 | 0.108 | |
Neoadj. RTx | 0.555 | 0.232–1.329 | 0.186 |
Adj. RTx | 0.482 | 0.243–0.954 | 0.036 |
Chemotherapy | |||
No CTx | 1 | 0.032 | |
Neoadj. CTx | 0.637 | 0.215–1.888 | 0.416 |
Adj. CTx | 0.419 | 0.213–0.823 | 0.012 |
Local recurrence | |||
No | 1 | <0.001 | |
Yes | 2.765 | 1.655–4.620 | |
Distant metastasis | |||
No | 1 | <0.001 | |
Yes | 8.705 | 4.915–15.418 | |
Wound-healing complications | |||
No | 0.006 | ||
Yes | 2.247 | 1.255–4.021 |
Reference | Nr. of Patients | Resection Margin Categories | Impact on LR | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dickinson I.C. et al., ANZ J. Surg. 2006 [12] | 303 | Contaminated, <1, 1–4, 5–9 and 10–19 mm | Margin can safely be as narrow as 1 mm | Including re-resections, regardless of tumor size and difficulty of resection |
Bilgeri A. et al., Cancers 2020 [8] | 305 | Contaminated, <1, 1–5, >5 and >10 mm | A margin of >5 mm is sufficient, wider margins do not benefit the patients | Including re-resections; margin, tumor size, and age are linked to RTx and CTx. |
McKee MD et al., J. Surg. Oncol. 2004 [20] | 111 | Contaminated, 1–9 and >10 mm | Margins > 10 mm are optimal for extremity resections | Including low-grade STS and re-resections, low percentage of adj. RTx and CTx |
Fujiwara T et al., Eur. J. Surg. Oncol. 2020 [7] | 305 | Contaminated, 0.1–0.9, 1.0–1.9, 2.0–4.9, 5.0–9.9 and >10 mm | A margin of >10 mm is advocated | Not all negative margins could retrospectively be sorted into the right WHO category |
Kainhofer V et al., Eur. J. Surg. Oncol. 2016 [5] | 265 | UICC- and R-Classification | R0 resections are superior when classified according to the UICC-classification | Including low- and high-grade STS and re-resections; treatment for atypical liposarcomas changed during the second half |
Gundle KR et al., J Clin. Oncol. 2018 [30] | 2217 | R-Classification, R + 1-Classification and TMCC classification | An R + 1 mm classification reduced LR-differences between R1 and R0, but the R-classification best determined the risk of LR | Single-center study, and treatment protocol has changed over the years; tumor sampling errors cannot be ruled out |
Sampo M et al., Br. J. Surg. 2008 [10] | 270 | <0.4, 0.4–2.0, >2.0 mm | A surgical margin of 2–3 cm provided reasonable local control, even without the use of radiotherapy | Including low- and high-grade STS as well as post-radiation STS and patients who received amputation. |
Yurtbay A et al., Medicina 2025 [11] | 185 | Contaminated, ≤1 and >1 mm | a negative surgical margins distance greater than 1 mm improves LRFS | Including low-grade STS, anatomical boundaries could not be evaluated |
Our findings | 207 | Contaminated, 0.1–1, >1–5 and >5 mm | A margin of >5 mm is advised | Anatomical boundaries could not be evaluated, treatment protocol has shifted over the years |
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Steffens, J.M.; Budny, T.; Gosheger, G.; De Vaal, M.; Rachbauer, A.M.; Laufer, A.; Engel, N.M.; Deventer, N. The Impact of Resection Margins in Primary Resection of High-Grade Soft Tissue Sarcomas: How Far Is Far Enough? Biomedicines 2025, 13, 1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13051011
Steffens JM, Budny T, Gosheger G, De Vaal M, Rachbauer AM, Laufer A, Engel NM, Deventer N. The Impact of Resection Margins in Primary Resection of High-Grade Soft Tissue Sarcomas: How Far Is Far Enough? Biomedicines. 2025; 13(5):1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13051011
Chicago/Turabian StyleSteffens, Julian Miles, Tymoteusz Budny, Georg Gosheger, Marieke De Vaal, Anna Maria Rachbauer, Andrea Laufer, Nina Myline Engel, and Niklas Deventer. 2025. "The Impact of Resection Margins in Primary Resection of High-Grade Soft Tissue Sarcomas: How Far Is Far Enough?" Biomedicines 13, no. 5: 1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13051011
APA StyleSteffens, J. M., Budny, T., Gosheger, G., De Vaal, M., Rachbauer, A. M., Laufer, A., Engel, N. M., & Deventer, N. (2025). The Impact of Resection Margins in Primary Resection of High-Grade Soft Tissue Sarcomas: How Far Is Far Enough? Biomedicines, 13(5), 1011. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines13051011