Title: TUMOR
1TUMOR
- Dr Mohammad.ali
- Department of Orthopedics
2PATHOLOGY of NEOPLASM
- Abnormal mass of tissue
- Growth is autonomous, exceeds normal, persist
after cessation of stimuli - Benign vs. Malignant
- Differentiation Anaplasia
- Growth rate
- Local invasion
- Ability to metastasize
3HISTOPATHOLOGY
- Anaplasia
- Hallmark of malignancy
- Pleomorphism
- Hyperchromatism
- Nuclear cytoplasmic ratio of 11
- Abundant mitoses
- Tumor giant cells
4- BENIGN more common
- MALIGNANT (SARCOMAS) are rare
- Differentiation of the lesion
- Fibrous tissue
- Fibrohistiocytic
- Adipose tissue
- Muscle tissue
- Lymph vessels
- Synovial tissue
- Peripheral nerves
- Cartilage and Bone Forming tissue
- Pluripotential Mesenchyme
- Blood Vessels
- Uncertain Histogenesis
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7DIAGNOSTIC CLUES
- Size
- A mass that is small (lt 5 cm in its greatest
dimension) is unlikely to be malignant, while a
mass that is gt 5 cm has at least a 20 chance of
being a soft tissue sarcoma -
- Determined by physical examination if the lesion
is subcutaneous and easily palpable, or by
ultrasound, CT or MRI
8DIAGNOSTIC CLUES
- Superficial or deep?
- Superficial lesions are more likely to be benign
and, when malignant, may have a better prognosis
than deep lesions -
- The depth is best determined by physical exam,
ultrasound or MRI - The thigh and buttocks are the 2 most common
sites of sarcomas. Any large deep mass in the
thigh or buttocks should be considered at high
risk for being a malignant lesion
9DIAGNOSTIC CLUES
- Cystic or solid
- Most cystic lesions are inflammatory or benign
lesions, such as ganglion cysts or soft tissue
abscesses - If the lesion is solid, it could represent either
a benign or malignant neoplasm - Attempt Transillumination
- If deep, ultrasound or MR scan will determine
this
10DIAGNOSTIC CLUES
- Length of symptoms
- Rapidly increased in size over 2 months is more
likely to be a sarcoma than the lesion that has
slowly enlarged over a 20-year period - A mass that increases and decreases in size is
usually a cystic lesion - Caution should be taken with masses that have
been present for a long time. Soft tissue
sarcomas occasionally present with a history of
many years duration up to 30 years
11TUMOUR WORKUP
- History (age, sex, site and past history)
- Clinical examination
- Thyroid
- Breasts
- Chest
- Liver
- Kidney
- Rectal (prostate rectal tumors)
- Bloods
- FBC (leukaemic cells etc) ESR (often elevated)
- Biochemistry (Ca, PO4, liver enzymes and
Alkaline Phosphatase) -gt mets - Acid Phosphatase (prostate and increased with
metastatic deposits) - Thyroid function tests
- PSA
- Serum Protein Electrophoresis (Myeloma)
12TUMOUR WORKUP (cont)
- Urinalysis
- Urine Bence-Jones (myeloma)
- CXR
- Abdominal ultrasound
- Bone scan -gt other sites
- MRI -gt soft tissue extent and association with
nerves and vessels - CT of lesion and chest (-gt staging)
- Angiography -gt tumor blood supply and
relationship to major vessels - Biopsy
13IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- Plain radiograph
- Soft tissue shadow, isodense with muscle
- Specific features
- Phlebolith within a hemangioma
- Cartilaginous juxta-articular masses in synovial
osteochondromatosis - Mature peripheral calcification in myositis
ossificans - Central calcification in extraosseous
osteosarcoma - Amorphous calcium deposit in tumoral calcinosis
- Bony involvement
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- Ultrasound
- Rapid inexpensive test
- Differentiate solid from cystic
- Determine size
- Can suggest sarcoma features
- As many soft tissue sarcoma present as hypoechoic
mass than the echogenic pattern seen in benign
lesion, with exception of liposarcoma - Delineate areas of distinctly solid portion of a
a mass, a great help for biopsy - Aid in percutaneous needle biopsy
- Study of vascular supply by Color Doppler
17IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- CT scan
- Detecting calcification or ossification within
the lesion - Evaluate lung metastases
- CT guided needle biopsy
- Arteriography
- Less frequently used
- Mapping of lesions in difficult anatomy location
- Identifying normal anatomic variants before
surgery - Preoperatively, to embolize hypervascular lesions
18IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- Bone scan
- Technetium Tc 99m bone scan
- Detects area of rapid bone turnover
- Sensitive but not very specific, abnormal scan
should be further studied with plain radiograph,
CT and MRI - Part of staging
19IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- MRI
- Replace role of CT and arteriography
- Advantages
- superior soft tissue contrast
- multiplanar imaging
- no ionizing radiation the need for iodinated
contrast agent - no artifact problem
- General Roles
- Accurate preoperative staging
- Restriction of differential diagnosis
- Assistance with biopsy placement
- Monitoring response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy
or radiotherapy - Identification of residual or recurrent tumor
during postoperative period
20IMAGING OF SOFT TISSUE TUMOR
- MRI (cont)
- Conventional T1 weighted and T2 weighted
- T1 weighted differentiate the hyperintense fatty
tissue with hypointense tumor - T2 weighted with or without fat suppression is
the most appropriate sequence tumor will be
hyperintense
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26STAGING SYSTEM
- Prognostic variables
- Histologic grade
- Tumor size
- Tumor depth
- Compartment status
- Metastases
27STAGING SYSTEM
- SURGICAL STAGING SYSTEM (SSS)
- Enneking staging system
- American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC)
- Cancer Staging Manual 5th Edition
- Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK)
28STAGING SYSTEM
- SURGICAL STAGING SYSTEM (Enneking)
Stage Stage Description Prognostic Factors
IA Low Grade Intracompartmental G1 T1 M0 G1 Low Grade G2 High Grade T1 Intracompartmental T2 Extracompartmental M1 Any regional or systemic metastasis
IB Low Grade Extracompartmental G1 T2 M0 G1 Low Grade G2 High Grade T1 Intracompartmental T2 Extracompartmental M1 Any regional or systemic metastasis
IIA High Grade Intracompartmental G2 T1 M0 G1 Low Grade G2 High Grade T1 Intracompartmental T2 Extracompartmental M1 Any regional or systemic metastasis
IIB High Grade Extracompartmental G2 T2 M0 G1 Low Grade G2 High Grade T1 Intracompartmental T2 Extracompartmental M1 Any regional or systemic metastasis
III Any Metastases Any G, Any T, M1 G1 Low Grade G2 High Grade T1 Intracompartmental T2 Extracompartmental M1 Any regional or systemic metastasis
29Prognostic Factors
- Histologic Grade (assessment of biological
aggressiveness) - G0
- Histological benign
- Well differentiated and low cell to matrix ratio
- G1
- Low grade malignant
- Few mitoses, moderate differentiation and local
spread only - Have low risk of metastases
- G2
- High grade malignancy
- Frequent mitoses, poorly differentiated
- High risk of metastases
- Features of aggressive tumors
- Cellular atypia
- Frequent mitoses
- Extensive necrosis
- Significant vascularity
- Small amounts of immature matrix
30Prognostic Factors
Low Grade High Grade
Myxoid Liposarcoma Lipoma-like Liposarcoma Angiomatoid Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma Pleomorphic Liposarcoma Synovial Sarcoma Rhabdomyosarcoma
31Prognostic Factors
- Site (anatomic setting of the lesion)
- T0 Intracapsular
- T1 Intracompartmental
- (e.g. cortical bone, joint capsule or fascia)
- T2 Extracompartmental
- (spreads beyond 'fascial' plane without
longitudinal containment)
32Prognostic Factors
Intracompartment Extracompartment
Intraosseous Intraarticular Intrafascial compartments Ray of Hand or Foot Posterior or Anterior Leg Ant, Med, Post Thigh Buttocks Volar or Dorsal Forearm Ant or Post Arm Pericapsular Soft Tissue Extension Deep Fascial Extension Extrafascial Planes/Spaces (Neurovascular containing spaces) Mid Hind Foot Mid Hand Popliteal Fossa Groin-Femoral Triangle Intra Pelvic Antecubital Fossa Axilla Paraspinal
33BIOPSY OF TUMORS
- Simple ? Low Risk Procedure ?
- The planning of the biopsy is technically
demanding - All Biopsy carry extreme risk to patients limb
and potentially to the patients life - Poorly planned biopsy can affect diagnostic
accuracy and result in delay in diagnosis and
treatment
34BIOPSY OF TUMORS
- Planning the biopsy
- Basic understanding of diseases/tumors and an
ability to generate differential diagnosis - The differential diagnosis determines the
indications for biopsy - Knowledge of appropriate placement of limb
salvage incisions for resection and
reconstruction - Access to experienced musculoskeletal pathologist
35BIOPSY OF TUMORS
- Type of Biopsy
- Closed Biopsy (Core Needle)
- Open Biopsy
- Incisional Biopsy
- Excisional Biopsy
- Primary Wide Excision
36BIOPSY OF TUMORS
Closed Open
Accuracy of 85 Attributed to small size of biopsy leading to sampling error Insufficient for electron microscopic, immunohistochemical, and molecular genetic testing Non diagnostic needle biopsy results in delay in diagnosis and the need for subsequent formal open biopsy Accuracy of 96 Further minimizes risk of misdirected treatment and its associated morbidity
37BIOPSY OF TUMORS
Closed Open
Less invasive Invasive
Requires only LA outside formal OT Requires Formal Anesthetics Support and OT
Less soft tissue contamination Needle tract contamination Inappropriate incision placement soft tissue contamination that cannot be incorporated into a limb salvage or amputation plan Leading to increase likelihood of the need for soft tissue coverage and a higher risk for amputation
Lower risk of complication Higher risk of perioperative complication infection, haematoma and pathological
Useful in areas of difficult access, like spine and pelvis without risking significant contamination
38Biopsy Technique
- Incisional Biopsy
- Directly cutting into tumor to remove a sample
without excising lesion - The entire field is excised en bloc with the
major tumor mass at the time of definitive
resection - Excisional Biopsy
- Removing the entire lesion at the time of biopsy
- Marginal excision
- Primary Wide Excision
- Entire lesion is excised while cutting through
normal healthy tissue and leaving a margin of
surrounding healthy tissue against the lesion
39Biopsy TechniqueExcisional Biopsy
- Indication
- To obtain a large sample size
- For benign non aggressive diagnosis, is the
treatment of the lesion in single stage - Carry higher risk of extensive soft tissue
important structures contamination - Not for lesion which is suspiciously malignant or
at high risk anatomical region
40Biopsy TechniquePrimary Wide Excision Biopsy
- Indication
- High suspicious of malignancy
- When the risk of contaminating major important
structures with another form of biopsy outweighs
the risks and functional and cosmetic deficits of
excising the lesions primarily
41Biopsy Procedure
- Longitudinal Incision
- Limb Salvage or Amputation incision
- Surgical Instrument handling
- Anybody fingers should not be placed directly
into the wound - Soiled sponges
- The surgical field should not be in continuity
with other surgical field - Tourniquet, no exsanguinations
42(No Transcript)
43Biopsy Procedure (cont)
- Direct approach, contaminating only one
compartment, not through planes - Hemostasis
- Vessels, nerves and tendons should not be exposed
- Blunt retractors draping
- Biopsies the peripheral portion with ellipse
shaped cut - Cultures
- Volume of 1 to 2 cm3
- Post biopsy hemostasis
- Closure in layers
- Small bite suturing
- Light pressure bandaging
- Immobilization and protection of weight bearing
44OPTION OF DEFINITIVE MANAGEMENT
CLINICAL AND RADIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS
BIOPSY
OBSERVE
STAGING STUDIES
ELIMINATION OF PRIMARY TUMOR
NON SURGERY
SURGERY
RADIOTHERAPY
CHEMOTHERAPY
GENETIC IMMUNOLOGIC PROTEIN BASED
COMBINATION OF SURGERY AND NON SURGERY
45PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- INTRALESIONAL
- Incomplete excisions, either gross or microscopic
tumor remains ( MARGIN? ) - MARGINAL EXCISION
- Resection at border between the tumor the
immediate adjacent tissues, leaving no tumor, as
verified by both gross and microscopic inspection
( SATELLITE LESION? ) - WIDE EXCISION
- Excision through normal tissue that is not
reactive or edematous, as judged by preoperative
MRI, intraoperative gross inspection and
microscopic sections ( SKIP LESION? ) - RADICAL EXCISION
- Wide excision based on anatomic barriers to tumor
infiltration ( METASTATIC
LESION?) - ? COMPLETE REMOVAL AND RECURRANCE RATE
46PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- TUMOR RESECTION STRATEGIES
- COMPLETE RESECTION for CURE
- INCOMPLETE RESECTION with CURE obtained from
LOCAL ADJUVANT THERAPIES - PARTIAL RESECTION without the expectation of
achieving cure (DEBULKING) - CURE means when no local or distant viable tumor
cells remain after surgical resection - Tumor debulking is to eliminate a majority of the
tumor with minimum of morbidity to prolong
quality of life and to reduce or eliminate pain
47PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- Meticulous attention to the isolation of clean
and contaminated fields, instruments, and
personnel - Minimize perioperative exposure to pathogens
- IV antibiotic, antibiotic cement, antibiotic in
irrigation medium - Allograft and Prosthetic components
48PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- HIGH GRADE SARCOMA
- The goal is to remove as much tumor to achieve
cure while removing the least amount of healthy
tissue as possible to preserve function - AMPUTATION versus Limb Salvage Surgery
- No Significant Statistical Advantage in term of
Local Recurrence - Following amputation 1 to 3
- Following limb salvage surgery lt8
- Functional loss can be extreme in amputation
group - Revision surgery rates for complications and
revisions are considerably lower for amputation
group
49PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- HIGH GRADE SARCOMA
- Superficial sarcoma of the trunk have better
prognosis than deep axially located tumor - Deep axially located tumor like around the spine
and pelvis - Usually present late and often large by the time
the diagnosis is made - Do not routinely permit large volumes of normal
surrounding tissue to be removed with the tumor
50PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- HIGH GRADE SARCOMA
- The more inflammatory, fast growing,
infiltrative the tumor, the wider the margin
should be, the more strongly preoperative
radiation or chemotherapy is indicated - Final consideration is the patients personal
wishes.
51PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- LOW GRADE SARCOMA
- Generally treated similar to the high grade
- Margins are typically smaller as they show
- Smaller or absent reactive zone of inflammation
- Limited infiltration
- However a wider margin of excision might be
preferable it if would eliminate the need for
radiation therapy - Cure is achieved through a carefully planned
surgical excision without adjuvant therapy
52(No Transcript)
53(No Transcript)
54PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- The second part of surgical resection
- Planned preoperatively
- Liaison with plastic surgeon
- Principles for Pure Soft Tissue Defect Recon
- Preserve Limb Viability
- Restore Function
- Achieve Skin Closure
55PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Principles of Wound Closure
- To have the most rapid biologic reconstitution of
a viable skin barrier, between the deep tissue
and outside world - Minimize dead space in the deep tissue layer
which can harbor bacterial inoculum - Radiation and Chemotherapy impair wound healing
56(No Transcript)
57PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Dynamic Reconstruction
- Space Filling Reconstruction
- Skin Barrier Reconstruction
58PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Dynamic Reconstruction
- Dynamic function include stability, power, blood
transport or nerve conduction - Refers to the implant or transfer of tissues
- Ligaments deficit in knee replaced with
autograft, allograft or artificial replacement - Vessels Reconstruction to restore blood flow
- Nerve Grafting for protective sensation and motor
function - Tendon or Muscle Transfer restore lost motor power
59PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Space Filling Reconstruction
- To fills defects created by surgery
- Not to restore function but to relieve tension on
the wound, obliterate dead space and place
healthy tissue in areas that will promote rapid
healing and reduce infection risk - Muscle or Myocutaneous Local, Free and
Vascularized Flap
60(No Transcript)
61PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Skin Barrier Reconstruction
- Precise wound closure is critical
- Wound breakdown can result in deep infection
subsequent limb loss, might prevent or delay the
use of chemotherapy or local radiation therapy - Skin and subcutaneous fascial layer should be
closed in layers, with precise matching of the
anatomic layers - Non braided suture short tail to minimize
foreign body - Small skin staplers with Antibiotic Ointment
applied - Early often changing of dressing
- If skin closure with minimal tension cannot be
achieved - SSG of flap
62PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- DEFECT RECONSTRUCTION
- Surgical drains
- Eliminate dead space-preventing accumulating of
fluid pockets - Divert drainage from the skin incision
- Prevent formation and spread of haematoma along
fascial planes-might carry tumor cells - Drain tracks
- Should not traversed uninvolved anatomic areas
- Should exit the skin in line with the incision
- Critical drains can be sutured to skin but keep
the suture sites close by for easy excision with
drain track if needed
63PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- INTRAOPERATIVE ADJUVANT THERAPIES
- Tumor killing potential
- H2O2 - tumoricidal ability
- Thermal kill
- Tissue Heating with diathermy, heat gun,
cryosurgery using liquid nitrogen - Produce necrosis of 1 to 10mm
- Lasers
- Intraoperative Radiation
- Advantage Precise Direct to tumor bed, not
associated with wound healing difficulty seen
with preop, high dose radiation therapy - Brachytherapy
- Deliver local radiation through catheters
implanted surgically after tumor excision
64PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- THE YOUNG CHILD
- Remarkable adaptive capabilities to anatomic loss
either by tumor itself or amputation - Preserving epiphyses through very closed
resection margins a few mm away from metaphyseal
tumor - If the child survive from the sarcoma, the
extremely long life span ahead raises the
lifetime risk of developing - Secondary radiation induced sarcomas and other
radiation associated morbidities - Secondary chemotherapy induced cancers
65PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- THE VERY OLD
- Most common malignant fibrous histiocytoma
- Problem less cardiac reserve and overall poorer
physiologic function - Adjuvant chemotherapy and high dose radiation
therapy will cause more risk than benefit - More radical resection with much wider margin
- Senile and Demented Patients, Medical disease
which complicate wound healing - Aim for NO TREATMENT or PALLIATIVE
66PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- METASTATIC SARCOMA AT PRESENTATION
- Poor prognosis
- Survival depends on removal of primary tumor
eradication of metastatic disease through either
surgical or chemotherapeutic modalities or
combination of both - CHEMOTHERAPY IS ESSENTIAL to eliminate the
micrometastases - Any surgical complication that can delay or
prevent perioperative chemotherapy must be
avoided - Limb salvage has NO ROLE
67PRINCIPLES OF TUMOR SURGERY
- UNRESECTABLE TUMOR
- Tumor involves major vessels, nerves or other
critical structures - Means unacceptable morbidity
- Truly unresectable situation is death as result.
- In cases with unacceptable morbidity like
resection of tumor including the sciatic nerve,
producing insensate lower limb - Amputation is better choice OR
- Limb Salvage surgery with the idea of tiring and
skill demanding nerve grafting or reconstruction,
in mind OR if complication arises, amputation at
a very high level is unavoidable - Excellent candidate for preoperative
chemotherapy, radiation therapy or more
aggressive techniques like isolated limb
perfusion to gain tumor size regression.
68PRINCIPLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY
- Action of Chemo Agents
- Damage DNA
- Alkylating agents, platinum compounds,
anthracyclines, epipodophyllotoxins - Deplete the cellular building blocks required for
replication - Antifolates, 5-fluoropyrimidines, cytidine
analogs - Interfere with microtubule function required for
mitosis - Vinca alkaloids, taxanes
69PRINCIPLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY
- Chemo Agents are cytotoxic to tumor cells through
induction of apoptosis - Selectivity is due to the fact that rapidly
dividing tumor did not have sufficient time to
repair the chemotherapy induced damage - Combination chemotherapy
- Antitumor effect will be cumulative whereas the
toxicity will not - Avoid resistant
- Effective for different phases of cell cycle
70PRINCIPLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY
- Indication
- Induction chemotherapy (Neoadjuvant or
Preoperative) - Decrease tumor size
- In tumor that are capable of metastases
- (Standard of care for osteosarcoma and Ewings
sarcoma) - Malignant musculoskeletal tumor with systemic
metastases - Chemosensitive neoplasm
- Osteosarcoma
- Ewings sarcoma
- Rhabdomyosarcoma
- Synovial sarcoma
- Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma
- For chemosensitive benign tumors which is
multiply recurrent or impinge on vital structures
71PRINCIPLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY
- Chemoresistant tumors
- Gastrointestinal stromal tumors
- Chondrosarcoma
- Alveolar soft part sarcoma
72PRINCIPLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY
- Side Effects
- Stunting of growth
- Osteoporosis
- AVN
- Cisplatinum -gt Nephrotoxicity and hearing loss
- Adriamycin -gt Cardiotoxicity
- Vincristine -gt Neurotoxicity
- Chemotherapeutic induced malignancy usually blood
forming eg leukaemias but also may -gt Ca bladder
or skin (particularly associated with
cyclophosphamide)
73PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Radioactive focused local treatment
- Using high energy photon beam produced by a
linear accelerator - Others gamma rays, electron beams, radiation
from brachytherapy, beams from heavy particle
like protons and neutrons - Mechanism of action
- Oxygenation of water molecules within the cells,
producing free radicals that interact with DNA to
cause strand break, eventually results in cell
death
74PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Radiation units
- Grays (Gy), a unit of absorbed dose (1Gy1J/kg)
- In the past rads
- 1 rad 1 centigray (cGy) or 1/100 of a Gy
- Radiotherapy is delivered in small doses or
fractions over many days - Allows a large total dose of radiation to be
delivered without exceeding the tolerance levels
of surrounding normal tissue - Standard fractionation 180 to 200 cGy daily, 5
days per week
75PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Indication in soft tissue sarcoma
- Radiosensitive sarcoma, theoretically, well
oxygenated tumors - Rhabdomyosarcoma
- PNET (extraosseous Ewings sarcoma)
- (definitive primary radiotherapy local control
rate for the above type of tumor is 80) - (mandatory treatment for all patient)
- Other unresectable soft tissue tumor local
control rate is in the range of 25 to 30 - Current standard for high grade resectable
extremity soft tissue sarcomas is limb salvage
surgery, when possible, in conjunction with
radiotherapy
76PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Indication in soft tissue sarcoma
- Postoperative radiotherapy
- Decrease risk of local relapse for both high
grade and certain high risk low grade sarcoma. - For low grade sarcoma, consider if having
microscopic positive margin or of large tumor
size (gt5cm) - Preoperative radiotherapy
- Shrink tumor size
- Decrease risk of tumor contamination
- Intact well oxygenated tumor respond better than
hypoxic tumor bed - Disadvantages
- Delay in surgery
- Possible wound healing complication
- Less information on tumor extent and pathology
77PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Indication in soft tissue sarcoma
- Brachytherapy
- Insertion of radiation sources into tissues after
tumor resection before closure - Radioactive source (usually cesium or iodine)
placed inside the catheters on post op D5 - Excellent postoperative treatment for extremity
soft tissue sarcoma (adjuvant brachytherapy local
control rate for high grade lesion is 89) - Intraoperative Radiotherapy
- Electron or orthovoltage beam
- 74 local control rate for primary
retroperitoneal sarcomas when combined with
external beam radiotherapy
78(No Transcript)
79PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Timing of radiotherapy
- Definitive radiotherapy for rhabdomyosarcoma and
Ewings sarcoma is generally integrated into the
middle of a chemotherapy program - Postoperatively, as soon as adequate wound
healing is achieved, usually 3 to 6 weeks
80PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Side Effects
- Acute side effects depend on the total dose of
radiation and overall treatment time - Late side effects depend on fraction size
81PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Acute Side Effects
- begins after first 2 weeks and increase as the
treatment continues - Most common is fatigue
- Majority develop erythema, and temporary
desquamation - Uncommon wound dehiscence, suppresses blood
counts and other complications pertaining to
anatomic site involved - At least one clinic visit per week to see
radiation oncologist to assess and manage
potential side effects
82PRINCIPLES OF RADIOTHERAPY
- Late Side Effects
- Months to years after receiving radiotherapy
- Muscle fibrosis stretching exercise
- Weaken Bones and cause Joint Dysfunction
- Edema distal to irradiated site full
circumference of limb should never be treated to
a high dose - More then 20 years after radiation
- Secondary malignancy esp. in children
- Rate of secondary bone cancer after radiation
treatment for all childhood cancers was less than
1 - For those treated for Ewings sarcoma, the risk
was 5.4 - Others bone growth arrest and iatrogenic
scoliosis in children
83THANK YOU