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Title: Prognostic factors influencing pelvic, extra-pelvic, and intraperitoneal recurrences in lymph node-negative early-stage cervical cancer patients following radical hysterectomy. Author: Kong TW, Son JH, Paek J, Chang SJ, Ryu HS. Journal: Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol; 2020 Sep; 252():94-99. PubMed ID: 32590168. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinicopathologic factors influencing pelvic, extra-pelvic, and intraperitonal recurrences and survival in patients with lymph node-negative early-stage cervical cancer treated with abdominal/laparoscopic/robotic radical hysterectomy (ARH/LRH/RRH). STUDY DESIGN: We retrospectively reviewed clinicopathologic data of 342 patients with FIGO stage IB-IIA cervical cancer (2018 FIGO staging) treated with RH and retroperitonal lymphadenectomy between February 2000 and November 2018. Several clinicopathologic factors such as surgical methods including LRH/RRH-vaginal colpotomy (VC) and LRH/RRH-intracorporeal colpotomy (IC), surgical resection margin, and parametrial/endomyometrial infiltration were selected. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression and logistic regression models were used to determine prognostic factors. RESULTS: The median follow-up time was 54 months (range, 6-202 months). In multivariate analysis, positive endomyometrial infiltration (HR, 13.576; 95 % CI, 2.917-63.179; P = 0.001), positive parametrial resection margin (HR, 32.648; 95 % CI, 2.774-384.181; P = 0.006), and LRH/RRH-IC (HR, 4.752; 95 % CI, 1.154-19.578; P = 0.031) were significantly related to overall survival. Six (26.3 %) out of 21 patients with endomyometrial infiltration showed extra-pelvic recurrences associated with lung, liver, and brain. Three (50.0 %) out of 6 patients with positive parametrial margin showed both pelvic and extra-pelvic metastases, such as pelvis and supraclavicular/paratracheal lymph nodes. Five (62.5 %) out of the eight relapsed patients who received LRH/RRH-IC showed intraperitoneal recurrences including omentum, liver surface, colon serosa, and splenic hilum. CONCLUSIONS: Three risk factors including parametrial margin, endomyometrial infiltration, and laparoscopic IC appear to be involved in pelvic, extra-pelvic, and intraperitoneal recurrences in node-negative early-stage cervical cancer patients following RH. In particular, endomyometrial infiltration may be one of the strongest independent prognostic factors for extra-pelvic recurrence. Adjuvant systemic therapy may be indicated for lymph node-negative early-stage cervical cancer patients with endomyometrial infiltration.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]