Sangjoon Choi's research while affiliated with Samsung Medical Center and other places

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Publications (1)


Regional Lymph Node Metastasis of Scalp Angiosarcoma: A Detailed Clinical Observation Study of 40 Cases
  • Article

May 2020

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31 Reads

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10 Citations

Annals of Surgical Oncology

Yungjee Kang

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Sangjoon Choi

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[...]

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Han-Sin Jeong

Background: The incidence of lymph node metastasis (LNM) of angiosarcomas is reported to be less than 15%, and elective neck management has not been indicated. This study evaluated the incidence and pattern of regional LNM in patients with scalp angiosarcomas using the clinical data of its full course to understand time-event sequences of scalp angiosarcomas. Methods: This retrospective study included all consecutive cases of pathology-confirmed angiosarcomas and analyzed 40 cases of scalp angiosarcomas. The survival plots were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and the results are presented mainly in a descriptive manner. Results: The overall survival rate for the patients was 35.8% at 2 years. In contrast to previous reports, regional LNM was observed in more than half of the patients (52.5%) with scalp angiosarcoma. Meanwhile, a direct spread to distant organs occurred in only 27.5% of the patients. Regional LNM could predict clinical manifestation of systemic disease within 3 to 6 months. No differences in survival rates between patients with and without LNM were observed in this series. Occurrence of LNM seemed to be correlated with a high mitotic rate of primary tumors, but not with tumor grade or tumor dimension. The first-echelon lymph nodes from scalp angiosarcoma were peri-parotid, post-auricular, and level 2 lymph nodes. Conclusions: For a localized scalp angiosarcoma, it seems reasonable for initial curative surgery to include prophylactic evaluation of regional lymph nodes for pathologic nodal staging, prognosis estimation, and the decision for systemic treatments.

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Citations (1)


... The process of colonizing and forming a secondary tumor in a place far from the original tumor is a complex process in which the cancerous cell requires to complete several steps to become a clinically detectable lesion (144). Therefore, there are two types of cancer cell migration; thus if it leaves a place close to the location of the original tumor, it is called regional metastasis, but if it migrates far away to the body parts from the same location, it is known as distant metastasis (145,146). ...

Reference:

An Overview of Cancer Biology, Pathophysiological Development and It's Treatment Modalities: Current Challenges of Cancer anti-Angiogenic Therapy
Regional Lymph Node Metastasis of Scalp Angiosarcoma: A Detailed Clinical Observation Study of 40 Cases
  • Citing Article
  • May 2020

Annals of Surgical Oncology