Retrospective Analysis of Retroperitoneal-Abdominal-Pelvic Ganglioneuromas: An International Study by the Transatlantic Australasian Retroperitoneal Sarcoma Working Group (TARPSWG).
Author
Noh, SangkyuNessim, Carolyn
Keung, Emily Z
Roland, Christina L
Strauss, Dirk
Sivarajah, Gausihi
Fiore, Marco
Biasoni, Davide
Cioffi, Stefano Piero Bernardo
Mehtsun, Winta
Cananzi, Ferdinando Carlo Maria
Sicoli, Federico
Quagliuolo, Vittorio
Chen, Jun
Luo, Chenghua
Gladdy, Rebecca A
Swallow, Carol
Johnston, Wendy
Ford, Samuel J
Evenden, Caroline
Tirotta, Fabio
Almond, Max
Nguyen, Laura
Rutkowski, Piotr
Krotewicz, Maria
Pennacchioli, Elisabetta
Cardona, Kenneth
Gamboa, Adriana
Hompes, Daphne
Renard, Marleen
Kollár, Attila
Ryser, Christoph O
Vassos, Nikolaos
Raut, Chandrajit P
Fairweather, Mark
Krakorova, Dagmar Adamkova
Quildrian, Sergio
Perhavec, Andraz
Nizri, Eran
Farma, Jeffrey M
Greco, Stephanie H
Vincenzi, Bruno
Lopez, José Antonio González
Solerdecoll, Mireia Solans
Iwata, Shintaro
Fukushima, Suguru
Kim, Teresa
Tolomeo, Francesco
Snow, Hayden
Howlett-Jansen, Ynez
Tzanis, Dimitri
Nikulin, Maxim
Gronchi, Alessandro
Sicklick, Jason K
Publication date
2022-07-22Subject
Surgery
Metadata
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Abstract Objective: The Transatlantic Australasian Retroperitoneal Sarcoma Working Group conducted a retrospective study on the disease course and clinical management of ganglioneuromas. Background: Ganglioneuromas are rare tumors derived from neural crest cells. Data on these tumors remain limited to case reports and single-institution case series. Methods: Patients of all ages with pathologically confirmed primary retroperitoneal, intra-abdominal, and pelvic ganglioneuromas between January 1, 2000, and January 1, 2020, were included. We examined demographic, clinicopathologic, and radiologic characteristics, as well as clinical management. Results: Overall, 328 patients from 29 institutions were included. The median age at diagnosis was 37 years with 59.1% of patients being female. Symptomatic presentation comprised 40.9% of cases, and tumors were often located in the extra-adrenal retroperitoneum (67.1%). At baseline, the median maximum tumor diameter was 7.2 cm. One hundred sixteen (35.4%) patients underwent active surveillance, whereas 212 (64.6%) patients underwent resection with 74.5% of operative cases achieving an R0/R1 resection. Serial tumor evaluations showed that malignant transformation to neuroblastoma was rare (0.9%, N=3). Tumors undergoing surveillance had a median follow-up of 1.9 years, with 92.2% of ganglioneuromas stable in size. With a median follow-up of 3.0 years for resected tumors, 84.4% of patients were disease free after resections, whereas recurrences were observed in 4 (1.9%) patients. Conclusions: Most ganglioneuromas have indolent disease courses and rarely transform to neuroblastoma. Thus, active surveillance may be appropriate for benign and asymptomatic tumors particularly when the risks of surgery outweigh the benefits. For symptomatic or growing tumors, resection may be curative.Citation
Noh, S., Nessim, C., Keung, E. Z., Roland, C. L., Strauss, D., Sivarajah, G., Fiore, M., Biasoni, D., Cioffi, S. P. B., Mehtsun, W., Cananzi, F. C. M., Sicoli, F., Quagliuolo, V., Chen, J., Luo, C., Gladdy, R. A., Swallow, C., Johnston, W., Ford, S. J., Evenden, C., … Transatlantic Australasian Retroperitoneal Sarcoma Working Group (2023). Retrospective Analysis of Retroperitoneal-Abdominal-Pelvic Ganglioneuromas: An International Study by the Transatlantic Australasian Retroperitoneal Sarcoma Working Group (TARPSWG). Annals of surgery, 278(2), 267–273. https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000005625Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/230/PMID
35866666Journal
Annals of SurgeryPublisher
Lippincott, Williams & Wilkinsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1097/SLA.0000000000005625