Background: Isolated limb perfusion (TM-ILP) is an effective limb-sparing treatment for primarily nonresectable soft tissue sarcomas (STS). Surgical margins of STS after ILP were yet not systematically studied.
Methods: In 47 patients with nonresectable STS, TM-ILP with subsequent tumor resection was performed. Surgical margins were systematically analyzed by light microscopy using the TNM and the Enneking classification. Furthermore, margins were analyzed for tumor regression in terms of improved resectability. Results were correlated with clinical and pathological parameters.
Results: Of 47 STS, 44 were classified as high-grade (93.6%) with a median tumor size of 10.0 cm. Primary limb-salvage rate was 85.1%. According to TNM resection margins were complete in 70.2% (R0) and incomplete in 29.8% (R1=21.3%, R2=8.5%). According to Enneking, 27.7% intralesional, 42.6% marginal, 21.3% wide, 2.1% radical, and 6.4% unclassifiable margins were found. Prior surgery and/or radiotherapy significantly decreased margin quality. Ten patients with incomplete resection (three intralesional, seven marginal) had no viable tumor at the plane of dissection, which was designated as "improved margins." Whereas those patients remained relapse free, five patients with viable tumor (not improved margins) at the resection margin had local recurrences. Poor margins were associated with local and distant recurrences and limited disease-specific survival.
Conclusion: TM-ILP is effective for achieving limb salvage. Histopathology of surgical margins demonstrates cases with so-called "improved margins" after TM-ILP, which are related to a better outcome even in intralesionally resected tumors. Improvement of margins should be further evaluated as a potential relevant prognostic parameter.