SARCOMAS
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Benign brain tumors rarely recur, but sarcomas
can reappear after treatment was believed to have eliminated every
cell.
Likelihood of long-term survival depends on:
- the type and location of the tumor
- how much the tumor has metastasized, and on what organs, bones,
or tissues have been affected
More than 85% of patients survive for more than
five years after complete surgical removal of low-grade
osteosarcomas (tumors that arise in mature tissue and contain a
small number of cancerous cells). About 25-30% of patients diagnosed
with high-grade osteosarcomas (tumors that develop in immature
tissue and contain a large number of cancer cells) will die of the
disease.
Two-thirds of all children diagnosed with Ewing's
sarcoma will live for more than five years after the disease is
detected. The outlook is most favorable for children under age 10,
and least favorable in patients whose cancer is not diagnosed until
after it has metastasized: fewer than three of every 10 of these
patients remain alive five years later. More than 80% of patients
whose Ewing's sarcoma is confined to a small area and surgically
removed live, for at least five years. Postsurgical radiation and
chemotherapy add years to their lives. More than 70% of patients
live five years or more with a small Ewing's sarcoma that cannot be
removed, but only three out of five patients with large, unremovable
tumors survive that long. |
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| SARCOMAS RELATED ITEMS |
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