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Analysis of risk factors for recurrence in cervical cancer patients after fertility-sparing treatment: The FERTIlity Sparing Surgery retrospective multicenter study

Publikace na 1. lékařská fakulta |
2023

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

BACKGROUND: Fertility-sparing treatment in patients with cervical cancer should, in principle, follow identical algorithms to that in patients without future reproductive plans. In recent years, a trend toward non -radical procedures, such as conization or simple trachelectomy, has become apparent in medical literature, because of their associations with better pregnancy outcomes.

However, the published reports included small numbers of patients and heterogenous treatment strategies to ascertain the safety of such approaches.OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to collect multi-institutional data regarding the oncological outcomes after fertility-sparing treatment in patients with cervical cancer and to identify prognostic risk factors, including the influence of the radicality of individual cervical procedures.STUDY DESIGN: Patients aged 18 to 40 years with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics 2018 stage IA1 with positive lymphovascular space invasion or =IA2 cervical cancer who underwent any type of fertility-sparing procedure were eligible for this retrospective obser-vational study, regardless of their histotype, tumor grade, and history of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Associations between disease-and treatment -related characteristics with the risk of recurrence were analyzed.RESULTS: A total of 733 patients from 44 institutions across 13 countries were included in this study.

Almost half of the patients had stage IB1 cervical cancer (49%), and two-thirds of patients were nulliparous (66%). After a median follow-up of 72 months, 51 patients (7%) experi-enced recurrence, of whom 19 (2.6%) died because of the disease.

The most common sites of recurrence were the cervix (53%) and pelvic nodes (22%). The risk of recurrence was 3 times higher in patients with tumors >2 cm in size than in patients with smaller tumors, irrespective of the treatment radicality (19.4% vs 5.7%; hazard ratio, 2.982; 95% confidence interval, 1.383-6.431; P=.005).

The recurrence risk in patients with tumors =2 cm in size did not differ between patients who underwent radical trachelectomy and patients who underwent nonradical (conization and simple trachelectomy) cervical procedures (P=.957), regardless of tumor size subcategory (2 cm in size.