Implications of Tumor Characteristics and Treatment Modality on Local Recurrence and Functional Outcomes in Children With Chest Wall Sarcoma: A Pediatric Surgical Oncology Research Collaborative Study : Annals of Surgery

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Implications of Tumor Characteristics and Treatment Modality on Local Recurrence and Functional Outcomes in Children With Chest Wall Sarcoma

A Pediatric Surgical Oncology Research Collaborative Study

Harris, Courtney J. MD*,†; Helenowski, Irene PhD; Murphy, Andrew J. MD; Mansfield, Sara A. MD; LaQuaglia, Michael P. MD§; Heaton, Todd E. MD, MPH§; Cavalli, Michele BA§; Murphy, Joseph T. MD; Newman, Erika A. MD||; Overmen, Richard E. MD||; Kartal, Tanvi T. BA||; Cooke-Barber, J. MD**; Donaher, Addison BA**; Malek, Marcus M. MD††; Kalsi, Ranjeet DO††; Kim, Eugene S. MD‡‡; Zobel, Michael J. MD‡‡; Goodhue, Catherine J. APN‡‡; Naik-Mathuria, Bindi J. MD, MPH§§; Jefferson, Imory N. MPH§§; Roach, Jonathan P. MD¶¶; Mata, Claudia MPH¶¶; Piché, Nelson MD||||; Joharifard, Shahrzad MD, MPH||||; Sultan, Serge PhD***; Short, Scott S. MD†††; Meyers, Rebecka L. MD†††; Bleicher, Josh MD, MS†††; Le, Hau D. MD‡‡‡; Janek, Kevin MD‡‡‡; Bütter, Andreana MD§§§; Davidson, Jacob MSc§§§; Aldrink, Jennifer H. MD¶¶¶; Richards, Holden W. BA¶¶¶; Tracy, Elisabeth T. MD||||||; Commander, Sarah J. MD||||||; Fialkowski, Elizabeth A. MD****; Troutt, Misty BS**; Dasgupta, Roshni MD, MPH**; Lautz, Timothy B. MD*,†

Author Information
Annals of Surgery 276(6):p e969-e975, December 2022. | DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000004579

Abstract

Objective: 

To determine the impact of tumor characteristics and treatment approach on (1) local recurrence, (2) scoliosis development, and (3) patient-reported quality of life in children with sarcoma of the chest wall.

Summary of Background Data: 

Children with chest wall sarcoma require multimodal therapy including chemotherapy, surgery, and/or radiation. Despite aggressive therapy which places them at risk for functional impairment and scoliosis, these patients are also at significant risk for local recurrence.

Methods: 

A multi-institutional review of 175 children (median age 13 years) with chest wall sarcoma treated at seventeen Pediatric Surgical Oncology Research Collaborative institutions between 2008 and 2017 was performed. Patient-reported quality of life was assessed prospectively using PROMIS surveys.

Results: 

The most common diagnoses were Ewing sarcoma (67%) and osteosarcoma (9%). Surgical resection was performed in 85% and radiation in 55%. A median of 2 ribs were resected (interquartile range = 1–3), and number of ribs resected did not correlate with margin status (P = 0.36). Local recurrence occurred in 23% and margin status was the only predictive factor

(HR 2.24, P = 0.039). With a median follow-up of 5 years, 13% developed scoliosis (median Cobb angle 26) and 5% required corrective spine surgery. Scoliosis was associated with posteriorrib resection (HR 8.43; P= 0.003) and increased number of ribs resected (HR 1.78; P = 0.02). Overall, patient-reported quality of life is not impaired after chest wall tumor resection.

Conclusions: 

Local recurrence occurs in one-quarter of children with chest wall sarcoma and is independent of tumor type. Scoliosis occurs in 13% of patients, but patient-reported quality of life is excellent.

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