Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis : The Birmingham Experience

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Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis : The Birmingham Experience Rafiq Abed Lee Jeys Seggy Abudu Rob Grimer Roger Tillman Simon Carter Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham UK

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Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis : The Birmingham Experience. Rafiq Abed Lee Jeys Seggy Abudu Rob Grimer Roger Tillman Simon Carter. Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham UK. Clinical Course. Locally aggressive tumour with a high potential for local recurrence after resection, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis : The Birmingham Experience

Page 1: Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis : The Birmingham Experience

Extra-Abdominal Fibromatosis :

The Birmingham Experience

Rafiq AbedLee Jeys

Seggy AbuduRob Grimer

Roger TillmanSimon Carter

Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham UK

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Clinical Course

• Locally aggressive tumour with a high potential for local recurrence after resection,

• It exhibits self limiting behaviour • Shows growth arrest or spontaneous

regression in many patients

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Natural History

Dalen et al, Acta Orthop Scand 2003

• 30 patients followed for a mean of 28 years (range 20 – 54 years)

• 29 excised• LR 12 patients• > 1 LR in 8 patients• 3 spontaneous regression• 28 years – 29 tumour free, 1 stable disease @11 years• Fibromatosis has a high capacity for self limitation.

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Our Experience : Demographics

• 181 patients seen in tertiary referral centre

• Exclusions - 12 less than 1 year follow up- 9 lost to follow up

• Study Group- 160 patients- 84 female 76 male (1.1:1)- mean age 35.6 years

(range 1 – 96)

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Previous Treatment

• 114 no previous treatment• 46 treated elsewhere and

presenting with recurrent disease

• Follow up 13 – 205 months ( mean 49 months)

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Non surgical treatment

• 1 observed for 3 years with progressive disease

• 4 patients inoperable• 2 patients radiotherapy alone• 2 patients tamoxifen• 2 patients NSAID

• All had stable disease

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Results of surgical Treatment

All patients Primary presentation

Recurrent presentation

Number treated with surgery

147 106 41

No recurrence

88 (59%) 74 (70%) 15 (33%)

Recurrence 59 (41%) 32 (30%) 27 (67%)

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Recurrence Rates after Surgery.

Ballo 1999 30% @ 5 years

Sorensen 2002 73% @ 5 years

Phillips 2004 19.3% @ 3 years

Nyttens 2000 39%

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Does recurrence at presentation affect outcome?

• Our series - 147 patients- 106 primary - 30% - 41 recurrent - 67%

• Milan (2003) - 203 patients - 128 primary - 24%

- 75 recurrent - 41%

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Recurrence rate after Excision

0

10

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1stexcision

2ndexcision

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5thexcision

recurrencerate %

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Outcome of Recurence• Mean time to recurrence 18.6 months (4 -158 months) • 37 females, 22 males (1.6:1)• 40 further surgery

– LR in 58%• 6 Excision, Radiotherapy + Chemotherapy

– LR in 66%• 9 observed

– All stable disease• 2 Radiotherapy + chemotherapy

– NED at 68 and 108 months• 1 Tamoxifen

– Stable disease at 119 months• 1 Chemotherapy

– Stable disease at 79 months

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Does the Margin of Excision Influence Recurrence?

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Recurrence and Margins

Margin Number of Patients(147)

Number of recurrences (60)

%

Debulking 3 3 100%

Intralesional 79 30 38%

Marginal 55 23 42%

Wide 10 4 40%

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Is recurrence associated with margins?

• Margins – difficult to assess macroscopically• ‘Univariate analysis margins not associated’ -

Sorensen et al; Acta Orth Scand 2002.• ‘Recurrence did not correlate with surgical margins’

– Phillips et al; Br J Surg 2004.• ‘+ve margins did not affect local control significantly’

– Sharma S Afr J Surg 2006.

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Is recurrence associated with margins?

• Nuyttens et al; Cancer 2000 (April 1st!) • Recurrence rate -ve margins 28%

+ve margins 59%• Complete surgical clearance does not prevent

recurrence. • Incomplete margins do not mean recurrence.• Should we therefore perform surgery with high

morbidity to achieve adequate margins?

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Is recurrence associated with margins?

• Lewis et al; Ann Surg 1999• ‘aggressive attempts at achieving negative

margins may result in unnecessary morbidity. Function and structure preserving procedures should be the primary goal’

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Is recurrence associated with margins?

• Gronchi et al J Clin Oncol 2003• ‘Presence of microscopic disease does not

necessarily affect long term disease free survival in patients with primary presentation of extra abdominal desmoid tumours’

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Effect of Delay on Outcome• 8 observed for 9 – 55 months ( mean 33.8) then operated – 3 asymptomatic– 5 close to N/V bundle

• Operated for - Pain (2 patients) - Progression (6 patients)

• 7 intralesional excision no recurrence (fu 9 -52 months, mean 24.5)

• 1 debulking but progressive disease despite chemo + radiotherapy

• Delay in treatment by period of observation does not influence outcome

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Radiotherapy

• Alone - 22% local recurrence.• Combined with surgery – 6% local recurrence.

• Complications – fibrosisparaesthesiaoedemafracturelate malignancy

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Pharmacology

• Response rates – 40 – 50%but duration variable and ……

‘should be used in patients with progressive disease following failure of local treatment.’

(Mendenhall et al; Am J Clin Onc 2005)

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Birmingham Policy

• First surgery has best chance of cure.

• Therefore if symptomatic and resectable with the possibility of achieving adequate margins and limited morbidity – resect.

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If recurrent and asymptomatic observe.

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• If recurrent and symptomatic - second excision if morbidity low, consider radiotherapy if risk of local recurrence high.

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If progressive and inoperable pharmacological +/- radiotherapy.

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• In selected patients whose only surgical option is amputation … observe.

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But remember -

• Fibromatosis does not need treatment• Can spontaneously regress• Is an enigma• Avoid unnecessary morbidity• Get the patients before some one else does!• Always bigger than the MRI suggests.

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Thank you