Clinical and histologic findings in 163 patients with localized soft tissue sarcoma (STS) in the extremities and trunk were reviewed. There were 91 male patients and 72 female patients ranging in age from 2 to 84 years (median, 46 years). The histologic status of the tumors was as follows: low grade, 29 cases; intermediate grade, 52 cases; and high grade, 82 cases. The primary tumors were treated by intralesional excision (two cases), marginal (88), wide local (52), or amputation (21). Subsequent adjuvant therapy was given to 61 patients; 17 had radiotherapy (RT), 27 had chemotherapy (CH), and 17 had combined RT and CH. The overall survival (P less than 0.1) and disease-free survival (P less than 0.001) were better in the group that received multimodal treatment (radical surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy) than in the group treated only by surgery. This suggests the favorable role of adjuvant therapy. The univariate and the Cox multivariate analysis for prognosis revealed that sex, tumor-related symptoms, tumor size, tumor depth, and histologic grade were the significant factors. Among the treatment schemes, adjuvant chemotherapy was the only one that affected survival, especially for the intermediate-grade tumors. Initial surgical treatment (marginal versus wide local excision) significantly contributed to the local control of the primary tumors.