Purpose: To ascertain whether alveolar histology retains its adverse prognostic role in the subset of paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) patients, generally characterized by a very good outcome.
Patients and methods: Twenty pediatric patients were treated over a 25-year period using the protocols of the Italian and German Soft Tissue Sarcoma Cooperative Groups. Clinical characteristics at presentation were much the same as in non-alveolar patients.
Results: The proportion of patients with alveolar histotype (8%) in paratesticular site was lower than in the general RMS population (20-30%). With a median follow-up of 122 months, 5-year EFS and OS were 78 and 89%, respectively.
Conclusion: Our data suggest a distinctly better clinical behavior of paratesticular alveolar RMS than when the disease occurs at other sites. These patients were more intensively treated than the embryonal cases, however, so-although a treatment intensity reduction may be desiderable-the idea of eliminating the alkylating agents (as in low-risk embryonal paratesticular RMS) must be considered with great caution.
Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.