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. 2015 May 14;2015:532478. doi: 10.1155/2015/532478

Table 3.

Outcomes of patients who withdrew from treatment with GDB for reasons other than toxicity or progression (AWD = alive with disease; NED = no evidence of disease; DOD = died of disease).

Time on treatment (months) Best response (RECIST) Maximal change of tumor (%) Treatment after GDB Pathology from surgery Outcome
63 y male with recurrent UPS of thigh 1.4 PR −39 Resection of local recurrence Treatment effect but viable tumor NED at 3.1 y
55 y female with recurrent UPS of thigh 2.1 SD 0 Limb perfusion and then surgery 30–40% necrosis and fibrosis NED at 3.5 y
44 y female with angiosarcoma of vagina 3.0 PR −63 Observation since biopsy showed no tumor No tumor detected NED at 1.3 y
55 y male with metastatic LMS 3.5 PR −31 Resection of lung metastases Necrosis and histiocytic infiltration (70%) DOD at 1.4 y
50 y female with large pelvic (nonuterine) LMS 3.7 SD −11 Evaluated for surgery but unresectable N/A AWD at 2.5 y
39 y male with metastatic LMS 4.2 SD −15 Radio-frequency ablation of liver metastases N/A DOD at 2.4 y
69 y female with metastatic uterine LMS 4.5 SD −24 Resection of pelvic metastases Predominantly viable AWD at 2.2 y
40 y male with metastatic UPS 4.6 PR −32 Resection of lung metastases Viable tumor DOD at 1 y
52 y male with metastatic angiosarcoma 5.6 PR −31 Resection of lung metastases Viable but microscopic tumor AWD at 11 m
56 y male with metastatic pleomorphic liposarcoma 7.0 SD −30 Resection of solitary bone metastasis >99% necrosis, rare viable cells NED at 3.1 y
52 y male with metastatic LMS 8.4 PR −32 Resection of lung metastases 95% treatment effect AWD at 2.2 y
72 y female with metastatic UPS 8.9 PR −55 Observation and then further chemotherapy N/A AWD at 2.6 y
57 y female with metastatic uterine LMS 11.4 PR −43 Resection of lung metastases 30% treatment effect DOD at 1.9 y