Clinical Study
Metastatic Pattern, Local Relapse, and Survival of Patients with Myxoid Liposarcoma: A Retrospective Study of 45 Patients
Table 1
Data of the 7 patients with distant metastases.
| Sex (age at diagnosis) | Anatomical location of primary tumour | Largest diameter of primary tumour | Surgical margin | Location of first distant metastases (time after diagnosis) | Alive/dead (time after diagnosis) |
| Female (84 years) | Thigh | 16 cm | Radical | Bone metastases of the cervical, thoracal and lumbar spine (1.3 years) | Dead (1.8 years) | Male (45 years) | Thigh | 34 cm | Marginal | Intraabdominal metastases (present at diagnosis) | Dead (2.5 years) | Male (58 years) | Chest wall | Unknown | Intralesional | Intraabdominal and multiple skin metastases (present at diagnosis) | Dead (1.6 years) | Female (22 years) | Thigh | 15 cm | Intralesional | Bone (lumbar spine) and widespread intra- and paraspinal metastases (2.3 years) | Dead (3.7 years) | Male (43 years) | Foot | Unknown | Marginal | Paraspinal soft tissue metastasis of the thoracal spine (11.9 years) | Alive (13.2 years) | Female (29 years) | Knee | 14 cm | Intralesional | Mediastinum and paraspinal soft tissue metastases of the lumbar spine (0.4 years) | Dead (1.4 years) | Male (39 years) | Thigh | 14 cm | Radical | Solitary pleural metastasis (1.8 years) | Dead (5.3 years) |
|
|