4.6 Article

The rare entity of gastrointestinal leiomyosarcomas: An Italian multicenter retrospective study in high-volume referral centers

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.6340

Keywords

gastrointestinal leiomyosarcoma; localized disease; metastatic de novo disease; multidisciplinary; rare tumors; sarcoma; surgery; treatment

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In this retrospective observational study, GI leiomyosarcomas (GI-LMS) were found to be a rare and highly aggressive subtype of sarcomas. Localized GI-LMS can be cured with appropriate surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy, while de-novo metastatic disease has a poor prognosis. Therefore, efforts are needed to understand the biology and clinical behavior of GI-LMS and develop effective treatment strategies.
Background: After a huge efficacy of imatinib in treating patients with gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) was proven, a maximum effort was made to make a differential diagnosis between GISTs and gastrointestinal leiomyosarcomas (GI-LMS), showing the latter to be an extremely rare tumor entity. Limited data on GI-LMS biology, clinical behavior and drug-sensibility are available, and the clinical decision-making in this subgroup of patients is usually challenging. Methods: We conducted a multicenter, retrospective observational study on patients with diagnosed GI-LMS from 2004 to 2020 within six high-volume referral centers in Italy. Results: Thirty-three patients had diagnosis of KIT-negative GI-LMS confirmed by sarcoma-expert pathologist. The most common site of origin was the intestine. Twenty-two patients had localized disease and underwent surgery: with a median follow-up of 72 months, median disease-free survival was 42 months. Overall survival (OS)-rate at 5 years was 73% and median OS was 193 months. Five out of 10 patients with local relapse received a salvage surgery, and 2/5 remained with no evidence of disease. Thirteen patients received neoadjuvant (6) or adjuvant (7) chemotherapy, and 2/13 patients remained free from relapse. The median OS for patients with metastatic LMS was 16.4 months. Conclusion: GI-LMS is very rare and extremely aggressive subgroup of sarcomas with a high tendency to systemic spread. Localized GI-LMS at diagnosis may be cured if treated with adequate surgery with or without (neo) adjuvant chemotherapy, while de-novo metastatic disease appeared to have a poor prognosis. Clinical effort to understand GI-LMS biology and clinical behavior and to develop active treatment strategy, especially for metastatic-disease, is warranted.

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