In a single institution, the adoption of a policy of more liberal visceral en bloc resections was paralleled by greater local control. This benefit might translate into a prognostic improvement only on a longer follow-up for patients with a more indolent disease, whereas systemic failures seem to be the main problem in high-grade tumors. Radiation therapy could add some additional benefit to local outcome and possibly to survival.
BACKGROUND. The authors explored the prognostic factors and clinical outcomes of patients who had malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) with and without neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1).
METHODS.Two hundred five patients with localized MPNST who underwent surgery at the Istituto Nazionale per lo Studio e la Cura dei Tumori (Milan, Italy) over 25 years were reviewed. Forty-six patients had concomitant NF-1 syndrome, and 159 patients did not. Local recurrence, distant metastases, and survival rates were studied.
RESULTS.One hundred thirty patients presented with primary disease, and 75 patients had locally recurrent tumors. The disease-specific mortality rate was 43% at 10 years, with a continuously disease-free survival rate of no greater than 40%. Presentation with either primary or recurrent disease, tumor size, and tumor site (trunk vs. extremity) were the strongest independent predictors of survival. Margin status and radiation therapy also played a role, mostly related to their effect on local outcome. Pathologic grade influenced distant metastases, but only a trend for survival could be observed. No significant independent differences between patients with and without NF-1 were observed.
CONCLUSIONS.To the authors' knowledge, this was among the largest single-institution series to date. The results confirmed that patients with MPNST share similar prognostic factors with patients who have other soft tissue sarcomas and have some of the worst clinical outcomes. The presence of NF-1 syndrome per se did not affect survival, but patients with NF-1 were more likely to have larger tumors. Therefore, such patients should be followed carefully to detect disease as early as possible.
This being one of the largest mono-institutional series of DFSP, we confirm that long-term outcome is excellent, in terms of both local and distant control, after a wide excision with negative margins. Reconstructive surgery is often needed. Novel medical therapies will be of use in a limited subgroup of patients.
At a referral center with a liberal policy of re-excisions in adult primary STS of the extremities, the outcome of patients who underwent re-excision was similar to that of patients who had primary resections. Evidence of microscopic residual disease at re-excision was a marker of clinical aggressiveness.
Among people aging with HIV in northern Italy, a frailty index based on deficit accumulation predicted survival and incident multimorbidity independently of HIV-related and behavioral risk factors. The frailty index holds potential value in quantifying vulnerability among people aging with HIV.
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