Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4280285 The American Journal of Surgery 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundRecent studies have shown that aggressive preoperative radiation increases the likelihood of limb salvage in sarcoma patients.MethodThe Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database was used to run an adjusted logistic regression for the receipt of cancer-directed treatment modalities.ResultsOf patients with specific surgical procedures recorded (n = 2,104), 86.0% had undergone a limb-sparing procedure. On bivariate analysis, African American patients were less likely to receive a limb-sparing procedure than white patients (80.4% vs 86.9%; P = .02). On multivariate analysis, African Americans were significantly more likely to receive preoperative radiation (odds ratio [OR], 2.31; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.22–4.40; P = .011), yet this did not translate into an increase in limb salvage (OR, .67; 95% CI, .42–1.08; P = .10). Limb salvage significantly increased for all groups in 2001 and after (OR, 2.75; 95% CI, 1.55–4.88; P = .001) without a decrease in survival. For those with tumors greater than 4 cm, there was a trend away from limb salvage for African Americans (OR, .59; 95% CI, .32–1.07; P = .08).ConclusionsOur results of an increase in limb-salvage surgeries after 2001 without a decrease in survival support previous studies. The trend away from limb salvage for African Americans cannot be answered by this study.

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