Purpose: The aim of this study was to examine the clinical course of patients with the rare finding of regional lymph node metastasis (RLNM) from soft tissue sarcoma.
Materials and methods: Data from 28 out of 1,597 consecutive soft tissue sarcoma patients with RLNM were from the patients' charts and interviewing patients and general practitioners. Survival, including possible influencing factors, was statistically calculated.
Results: RLNM was seen in 21.4% for epithelioid sarcoma and 17.6% for clear cell sarcoma. All other entities presented RLNM rates below 10%. At follow-up after an average of 9.6 years, only three patients were alive with no evidence of disease. Survival was independent from surgical resection status of the primary tumor and the RLNM as well as from adjuvant radiation and chemotherapy. Tumor entity as well as the length of the time period from primary to RLNM affect survival.
Conclusions: Surgical treatment as well as radiation and chemotherapy may improve survival in selected cases but probably have their value much more in terms of local disease control and improvement life quality of patients who probably already suffer from an aggressive systemic disease at time of nodal involvement.