Typically Do Not Produce Symptoms Until Mass Effect Causes Compression of Other Structure
Liposarcoma Can Present as an Apparently Benign Fatty Lesion within the Inguinal Canal
Prognosis
Worse Prognosis Than Non-Retroperitoneal Sarcomas
High Local Recurrence (50%) & Distant Mets (20-30%)
Lymph Node Mets are Rare
Treatment
Primary Treatment: Surgical Resection
May Consider Neoadjuvant Radiation
Adjuvant Radiation Poorly Tolerated Due to Effects on Surrounding Structures
Retroperitoneal Sarcoma 1
Retroperitoneal Sarcoma on CT 2
References
Goyal S, Gupta M, Singal R, Goyal R, Mittal A. A large retroperitoneal tumor with psoas infiltration: A rare case report. N Am J Med Sci. 2010 Jun;2(6):285-7. (License: CC BY-NC-SA-3.0)
Dziewirski W, Rutkowski P, Nowecki ZI, Morysinski T, Sałamacha M, Kulik A, Kawczynska M, Kasprowicz A, Łyczek J, Ruka W. Surgery combined with brachytherapy in patients with retroperitoneal sarcomas. J Contemp Brachytherapy. 2010 Mar;2(1):14-23. (License: CC BY-NC-SA-4.0)
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