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Chordoma: A Clinicopathologic Study of Metastasis

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TLDR
Clinically, local aggressiveness and radiotherapy were positively correlated with this ability; histologically, more anaplastic chordomas were more likely to metastasize.
Abstract
Thirty cases of chordoma were reviewed with respect to the incidence of distant metastases. Follow-up information was obtained in 27 (90%), and the incidence of metastases was approximately 30%. The sites of the metastasizing primary tumors were predominantly sacral and vertebral. The sites of the metastases were predominantly skin and bone, although metastases were found in the lungs and lymph nodes. In two of the three patients with dermal metastases, the metastases were present prior to the diagnosis of the primary lesions. All three dermal metastases were initially diagnosed as mixed tumors of the skin, and all three patients had at least four such lesions of the skin. Accurate prediction of which chordomas will eventually metastasize is difficult. Clinically, local aggressiveness and radiotherapy were positively correlated with this ability; histologically, more anaplastic chordomas were more likely to metastasize.

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NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines

TL;DR: Lymphedema is a common complication after treatment for breast cancer and factors associated with increased risk of lymphedEMA include extent of axillary surgery, axillary radiation, infection, and patient obesity.
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Chordoma: incidence and survival patterns in the United States, 1973-1995.

TL;DR: Age-adjusted chordoma incidence rate was age-dependent, more common in males than females, and rare among patients aged <40 years and blacks, and racial disparities in incidence for the two developmental tumors, chordoma and Ewing's sarcoma were revealed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chordoma: current concepts, management, and future directions

TL;DR: Treatment of clival chordomas is unique from other locations with an enhanced emphasis on preservation of neurological function, typified by a general paradigm of maximally safe cytoreductive surgery and advanced radiation delivery techniques.
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Prognostic factors in chordoma of the sacrum and mobile spine: a study of 39 patients.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the clinical outcome of patients with chordoma using modern surgical principles aimed at complete resection and to identify prognostic factors such as larger tumor size, performance of an invasive morphologic diagnostic procedure outside of the tumor center, inadequate surgical margins, microscopic tumor necrosis, Ki-67 > 5%, and local recurrence were found to be adverse prognosis factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chordomas and chondrosarcomas of the cranial base: results and follow-up of 60 patients.

TL;DR: The outcome of 60 patients with cranial base chordoma or chondrosarcoma treated with extensive surgical resection between 1984 and 1993 is analyzed to find postoperative leakage of cerebrospinal fluid was the most frequent complication and was found to increase the risk of permanent disability.
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