Frontiers in Surgery (Sep 2021)

Postoperative Adjuvant Radiotherapy Can Delay the Recurrence of Desmoid Tumors After R0 Resection in Certain Subgroups

  • Tielong Yang,
  • Tielong Yang,
  • Haotian Liu,
  • Haotian Liu,
  • Zhichao Liao,
  • Zhichao Liao,
  • Chao Zhang,
  • Chao Zhang,
  • Lijie Xiang,
  • Lijie Xiang,
  • Jilong Yang,
  • Jilong Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.697793
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

Background: When patients with desmoid tumors (DTs) present uncontrolled clinical symptoms, surgery is an effective treatment, but the high postoperative recurrence rate is a major problem. The significance of adjuvant radiotherapy has been debated for many years, and the significance of aggressive surgery has not been reported.Methods: Medical records for DT patients were collected. KM analysis and the Mann–Whitney U-test were performed to evaluate the role of radiotherapy and aggressive surgery in the entire cohort and different subgroups.Results: Of 385 DT patients, 267 patients with R0 resection were included in the final analysis. A total of 53 patients (19.85%) experienced recurrence. Although radiotherapy showed no significant effect on recurrence-free survival (RFS) or time to recurrence (TTR) in the entire cohort, radiotherapy delayed recurrence in the age ≤ 30 years old subgroup (TTR = 35 months with surgery plus radiotherapy, TTR = 11 months with surgery alone; p = 0.014) and the tumor diameter >5 cm subgroup (TTR = 26 months with surgery plus radiotherapy, TTR = 11 months with surgery alone; p = 0.02) among patients with a single tumor. Aggressive surgery improved RFS in the tumor diameter >5 cm subgroup (p = 0.049) but not the entire cohort.Conclusions: Although radiotherapy cannot improve RFS, it can delay recurrence in the age ≤ 30 years old subgroup and the tumor diameter >5 cm subgroup among patients with a single tumor. For patients with large invasive tumors and multiple involved sites, aggressive surgery could be selected to achieve complete tumor resection to improve RFS.

Keywords