| Literature DB >> 21845420 |
Carien L Creutzberg1, Remi A Nout.
Abstract
Adjuvant treatment of patients with endometrial cancer is tailored to clinical-pathological prognostic factors. Pelvic radiation therapy for stage I endometrial cancer (EC) provides a highly significant improvement of local control, but without survival advantage. Low-risk EC patients have a very favorable prognosis, and should be observed after surgery. Use of adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) is limited to patients with high-intermediate or high-risk factors. For those with high-intermediate risk features, vaginal brachytherapy alone provides excellent vaginal control with less morbidity and better quality of life than pelvic external beam RT (EBRT). For patients with stage I-III EC with high-risk features, the use of adjuvant chemotherapy alone has not shown survival benefit as compared to pelvic EBRT. A first trial comparing pelvic EBRT with or without adjuvant chemotherapy has shown better progression-free survival with combined therapy. Current ongoing trials are exploring the role of combined RT and chemotherapy, compared to chemotherapy or RT alone.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21845420 PMCID: PMC3212694 DOI: 10.1007/s11912-011-0191-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol Rep ISSN: 1523-3790 Impact factor: 5.075
Randomized trials of adjuvant radiation therapy in stage I endometrial carcinoma
| Trial (ref) accrual period | No. patients eligibility | Surgery | Randomization | Locoregional recurrence | Survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Norwegian [ | 540 Stage I | TAH-BSO | VBT vs VBT + pelvic RT | 7% vs 2% at 5 years | 89% vs 91% at 5 years |
| PORTEC-1 [ | 714 IB grade 2–3 IC grade 1–2 | TAH-BSO | NAT vs pelvic RT | 14% vs 4% at 5 years | 85% vs 81% at 5 years |
| GOG-99 [ | 392 Stage IB, IC Stage II (occult) | TAH-BSO and lymphadenectomy | NAT vs pelvic RT | 12% vs 3% at 2 years | 86% vs 92% at 4 years |
| ASTEC/EN5 [ | 905 Stage IAB g3, IC, Stage II, serous/cc | TAH-BSO ± lymphadenectomy | NAT vs pelvic RT | 7%a vs 4% at 5 years | 84% vs 84% at 5 years |
| PORTEC-2 [ | 427, age >60 IB grade 3 IC grade 1–2 | TAH-BSO | VBT vs pelvic RT | 2% vs 2% at 5 years | 85% vs 80% at 5 years |
a53% in NAT arm received VBT; isolated locoregional recurrence reported
NAT no additional treatment; RT radiation therapy; VBT vaginal brachytherapy
Randomized trials investigating adjuvant chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy in endometrial cancer
| Trial (ref) | No. patients eligibility/stage | Randomization | Pelvic recurrence | Overall survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Susumu et al. [ | 385 Stage I–III with >50% MI (60% stage IB) | Pelvic RT vs chemotherapy (3× CAP) | 7% vs 7% | 85% vs 87% |
| Maggi et al. [ | 345 IB–II grade 3 (35%) III (65%) | Pelvic RT vs chemotherapy (5× CAP) | 12% vs 16% | 69% vs 66% |
| Randall et al. [ | 396 III; IV (28%) (residual <2 cm) | WART vs chemotherapy (8× AP) | 13% vs 18% | 42% vs 53% |
| Morrow et al. [ | 181 Clinical stage I II (occult) 31% node+ | Pelvic RT vs pelvic RT and chemotherapy (6–8× A) | N/A | No difference |
| Kuoppala et al. [ | 156 Stage IA g3, IB, Stage II–IIIA (46% stage IB) | Pelvic RT vs pelvic RT and chemotherapy (3× CEP) | 3% vs 2% | 85% vs 82% DSS 5 years |
| Hogberg et al. [ | 382 Stage I–III Stage I serous (49% stage IB) | Pelvic RT vs pelvic RT and chemotherapy (4× AP/TAP/TC/TEP) | N/A | 76% vs 83% |
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| PORTEC-3 | 670 Stages I–III with high-risk factors; serous/cc | Pelvic RT vs RT-CT (2× C during RT and 4× TC) | 300 | |
| GOG#249 | 562 Stages I–II with high-risk factors or serous/cc | Pelvic RT vs VBT and CT (3× TC) | 175 | |
| GOG#258 | 804 Stages III/IV | RT-CT (2× C during RT and 4× TC) vs CT (6× TC) | 132 | |
A doxorubicin; AP doxorubicin/cisplatin; CAP cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/cisplatin; CEP cyclophosphamide/epirubicin/cisplatin; CT chemotherapy; ns not statistically significant; RT radiation therapy; TAP paclitaxel/doxorubicin/cisplatin; TC paclitaxel/carboplatin; TEP paclitaxel/epirubicin/cisplatin; WART whole abdominal radiotherapy