Does the Histological Difference of Soft Tissue Sarcomas Affect the Rate of Skin Defect Reconstruction?
Hideki Tokumoto, Shinsuke Akita, Kentaro Kosaka, Yoshitaka Kubota, Nobuyuki Mitsukawa- Surgery
Background
In soft tissue sarcoma (STS) resection, flap reconstruction and/or skin grafting is frequently required. However, it is not clear whether the histological difference affects the rate of reconstruction. The present study aimed to investigate it.
Methods
This study compared in 5 classifications (105 adipocytic tumors, 102 fibroblastic tumors, 39 muscle tumors, 31 peripheral nerve sheath tumors, and 178 tumors of uncertain differentiation). In addition, the reconstruction rates of detailed tumor sites were compared. The median and case number (percentage) were calculated.
Results
Tumor size (adipocytic 112 mm vs fibroblastic 79 mm, muscle 72 mm, nerve 90 mm, uncertain 74 mm,
Conclusions
In adipocytic tumors, the tumor size was significantly large; however, the skin defect reconstruction rate was significantly lower than that of the other STS. Histologically, the reconstruction rate of STS derived from superficial tissue increases, whereas the reconstruction rate derived from deep tissue such as adipocytic tumor decreases.