European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology
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Chondrosarcoma represents the most common malignant tumour of the chest wall, with a tendency for local recurrence after resection. Here we report the successful complete resection of a giant, local recurrent chondrosarcoma of the chest wall (max. diameter 25 cm), in a patient with hereditary multiple exostoses, who had had a wide resection 8 years before. Clinical features and surgical management are described.
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Breast-conserving surgery for early breast cancer is now routinely used as an alternative to mastectomy. Despite post-operative radiotherapy, early local recurrence of tumour remains a concern. It has been reported that invasive and in-situ ductal carcinoma spread locally through the ductal tree in a segmental distribution, however, there is no consensus as to the best surgical method to maximize tumour clearance whilst leaving a good cosmetic result. ⋯ These results support the concept that ductal carcinomas spread locally in a segmental fashion. Patients with invasive ductal carcinomas are more likely to benefit from breast conserving surgery that is tailored to include the associated ductal tissue, in a segmental fashioned excision.
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Soft tissue sarcoma has a high risk of local recurrence. Therefore, extensive surgical resection has been combined with radiotherapy to improve long-term results. Because external beam radiation doses may be limited by adjacent radiosensitive tissue, intraoperative boost radiation has been devised to achieve a higher total radiation dose in combination with external beam radiotherapy. We report our experience with this multimodal approach for primary and recurrent soft tissue sarcoma. ⋯ In this prospective, non-randomized study of soft tissue sarcoma IORT was associated with a higher rate of infectious complications, but the the risk of death or recurrence was reduced by 40%.