Synovial sarcoma–identification of favorable and unfavorable histologic types: A Scandinavian sarcoma group study of 104 cases

1999 
Synovial sarcoma has traditionally been regarded as a high-grade sarcoma and treated as such. Recently, specific types of poorly differentiated synovial sarcoma have been defined and shown to affect prognosis adversely. We studied 104 primary synovial sarcomas of the extremities and trunk wall without metastasis at diagnosis that were retrieved from the Scandinavian Sarcoma Group Registry (SSG) and the Swedish Cancer Registry from 1986 to 1994. Follow-up was available in all patients, median 6 (3–11) years for the survivors. There were local recurrences in 15% of patients and metastases in 33%.Histologically, the tumors were divided into favorable and unfavorable types. The favorable type had no significant cytologic atypia, and in most instances, no necrosis and a mitotic count of < 10/10 hpf. The unfavorable type included so-called poorly differentiated synovial sarcomas as well as recognizable biphasic and monophasic synovial sarcomas with prominent nuclear atypia, extreme cellularity and nuclear crowd...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    37
    References
    40
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []