Background. Solitary (localized) fibrous tumors of the pleura (SFTP) are rare slow-growing neoplasms that generally have a favorable prognosis. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the predictors of outcome in a series of 110 patients with SFTP. Methods. The records of 110 patients (63 men; mean age 56.4 years; range, 17 to 79) surgically treated for SFTP from July 1990 to February 2008, were evaluated for demographics, operative procedure, histopathology, morbidity, mortality, postoperative chemotherapy or radiotherapy, and long-term follow-up. Results. Operative mortality was 0.9% (1 of 110) and the overall morbidity was 10.9% (12 of 110). The main surgical approach was video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (69 procedures with a conversion rate of 14.5%); 40 patients underwent thoracotomy and 1 had sternotomy. The visceral pleura was the site of origin in 95 tumors, the parietal pleura in 13, the mediastinal pleura in 2 cases. Sixty-three tumors were pedunculated, 35 were sessile, and 12 were inverted fibroma. Tumors were pathologically benign in 95 cases (86.4%), and malignant in 15 (13.6%). Symptomatic patients presented with malignant tumors more often than asymptomatic (19.1% versus 9.5%). Overall 10-year survival rate was 97.5%. The overall disease-free survival rate was 90.8% (95.7% in benign cases and 67.1% in malignant cases; p < 0.05). Eight patients presented with recurrence of disease, 4 cases of which were malignant and 4 were benign. Conclusions. Solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura is a rare disease that includes both benign and malignant variants. The outcome is mostly benign, with an overall 10-year survival rate of 97.5%. Pathologically benign lesions show a better disease-free survival rate than malignant lesions (95.7% versus 67.1%; p < 0.05). Surgery is the gold standard of treatment as neither radiotherapy nor chemotherapy proved to be effective. (Ann Thorac Surg 2009;88:1632-7) (C) 2009 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

Solitary Fibrous Tumors of the Pleura: An Analysis of 110 Patients Treated in a Single Institution / Cardillo, G; Carbone, L; Carleo, F; Masala, N; Graziano, P; Bray, A; Martelli, M. - In: ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY. - ISSN 0003-4975. - 88:5(2009), pp. 1632-1637. [10.1016/j.athoracsur.2009.07.026]

Solitary Fibrous Tumors of the Pleura: An Analysis of 110 Patients Treated in a Single Institution

Graziano P;
2009

Abstract

Background. Solitary (localized) fibrous tumors of the pleura (SFTP) are rare slow-growing neoplasms that generally have a favorable prognosis. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the predictors of outcome in a series of 110 patients with SFTP. Methods. The records of 110 patients (63 men; mean age 56.4 years; range, 17 to 79) surgically treated for SFTP from July 1990 to February 2008, were evaluated for demographics, operative procedure, histopathology, morbidity, mortality, postoperative chemotherapy or radiotherapy, and long-term follow-up. Results. Operative mortality was 0.9% (1 of 110) and the overall morbidity was 10.9% (12 of 110). The main surgical approach was video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (69 procedures with a conversion rate of 14.5%); 40 patients underwent thoracotomy and 1 had sternotomy. The visceral pleura was the site of origin in 95 tumors, the parietal pleura in 13, the mediastinal pleura in 2 cases. Sixty-three tumors were pedunculated, 35 were sessile, and 12 were inverted fibroma. Tumors were pathologically benign in 95 cases (86.4%), and malignant in 15 (13.6%). Symptomatic patients presented with malignant tumors more often than asymptomatic (19.1% versus 9.5%). Overall 10-year survival rate was 97.5%. The overall disease-free survival rate was 90.8% (95.7% in benign cases and 67.1% in malignant cases; p < 0.05). Eight patients presented with recurrence of disease, 4 cases of which were malignant and 4 were benign. Conclusions. Solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura is a rare disease that includes both benign and malignant variants. The outcome is mostly benign, with an overall 10-year survival rate of 97.5%. Pathologically benign lesions show a better disease-free survival rate than malignant lesions (95.7% versus 67.1%; p < 0.05). Surgery is the gold standard of treatment as neither radiotherapy nor chemotherapy proved to be effective. (Ann Thorac Surg 2009;88:1632-7) (C) 2009 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
2009
Solitary fibrous tumor; pleura; prognosis
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Solitary Fibrous Tumors of the Pleura: An Analysis of 110 Patients Treated in a Single Institution / Cardillo, G; Carbone, L; Carleo, F; Masala, N; Graziano, P; Bray, A; Martelli, M. - In: ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY. - ISSN 0003-4975. - 88:5(2009), pp. 1632-1637. [10.1016/j.athoracsur.2009.07.026]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1704593
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