W. Budach et al., DNA CONTENT AS A PREDICTOR OF CLINICAL OUTCOME IN SOFT-TISSUE SARCOMAPATIENTS, European journal of cancer, 30A(12), 1994, pp. 1815-1821
The prognostic relevance of cellular DNA content has been shown for a
variety of human malignancies. However, only a few studies concerning
soft tissue sarcomas have been published. Biopsies of 81 patients with
soft tissue sarcomas, referred for primary or secondary surgery, were
analysed by flow cytometry to determine cellular DNA content of tumou
rs. Most patients (60/81) already had one or more local recurrences at
the time of first presentation at Essen University. The median age of
the patients was 45 years (range 14-79). 44 (54%) patients had euploi
d and 37 (46%) had aneuploid tumours. Age, sex, and tumour localisatio
n (trunk versus extremity) were equally distributed between euploid an
d aneuploid sarcoma patients. The median follow-up was 69 months (rang
e 9-312). The median survival time for euploid and aneuploid tumours w
as 84 and 30 months, respectively (P < 0.0005). In the univariate anal
ysis, ploidy, S-phase percentage, localisation and tumour grading were
significant predictors of survival, whereas in the multivariate analy
sis, only DNA content and rumour localisation were independent prognos
tic variables for survival.