| Literature DB >> 25715766 |
Eun Young Ki1, Keun Ho Lee1, Jong Sup Park1, Soo Young Hur1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinicopathological features of pulmonary metastasis from cervical cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Prognosis; Pulmonary metastasis; Uterine cervical neoplasms
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25715766 PMCID: PMC4720087 DOI: 10.4143/crt.2014.206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 1598-2998 Impact factor: 4.679
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | No. of patients |
|---|---|
| Histology | |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 45 |
| Adenocarcinoma | 7 |
| Adenosquamous cell carcinoma | 3 |
| Small cell carcinoma | 1 |
| Event-free duration (mo) | |
| 0 | 6 |
| 1-12 | 23 |
| 13-24 | 18 |
| ≥ 25 | 9 |
| No. of resections | |
| 0 | 44 |
| 1 | 6 |
| 2 | 4 |
| 3 | 2 |
| Site of metastasis | |
| Right | 10 |
| Left | 5 |
| Both (multiple) | 37 |
| Malignant effusion | 4 |
| Symptom when the pulmonary metastasis was noted | |
| Incidentally found | 40 |
| Cough | 4 |
| Chest discomfort | 4 |
| Dyspnea | 8 |
Overall survival and event-free duration
| Factor | No. | Overall survival (95% CI, mo) | p-value | Event-free duration (95% CI, mo) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage | |||||
| I | 10 | 56.3 (33-96) | < 0.001 | 18.1 (10.2-32) | 0.297 |
| II | 29 | 32.9 (24.6-43.9) | 12.6 (9.7-16.3) | ||
| III | 6 | 16.2 (10.4-25.2) | 12.2 (9-16.6) | ||
| IV | 10 | 18.8 (8.8-40.4) | 20.7 (9.5-44.7) | ||
| Histology | |||||
| Squamous cell | 45 | 28 (21.4-36.5) | 0.141 | 13.3 (10.7-16.5) | 0.234 |
| Adenocarcinoma | 7 | 57.8 (39.2-85.3) | 21.9 (12.1-39.7) | ||
| Other | 4 | 29.7 (15.6-56.5) | 13.8 (6.3-30.5) | ||
| Adjuvant chemotherapy after diagnosis | |||||
| Yes | 52 | 32.6 (25.8-41.2) | 0.027 | 15.2 (12.8-18.2) | 0.006 |
| No | 4 | 12.5 (6.6-23.7) | 6 (1.4-26.5) | ||
| Detection number of metastatic pulmonary lesion | |||||
| 0-3 | 22 | 40.7 (27.7-60.0) | 0.035 | 17.6 (12.9-24.2) | 0.045 |
| ≥ 4 | 34 | 25 (19-33) | 12.1 (9.6-15.2) | ||
| Surgical resection | |||||
| Yes | 12 | 53.8 (32.8-88.4) | 0.006 | 17.2 (12.9-22.9) | 0.255 |
| No | 44 | 25.9 (20.3-33.2) | 13.3 (10.5-16.8) |
Calculated by univariate analysis. A p-value of < 0.05 is statistically significant.
0 means the patient had malignant pleural effusion without parenchymal invasion.
Fig. 1.Overall survival decreases by the initial stage in pulmonary metastasis (p=0.001, the log-rank test).
Fig. 2.Overall survival by the histologic type. There is no significant difference between squamous cell and non-squamous cell type (log-rank test, p=0.2).
Survival and important prognostic factors from the literature
| Source | No. of patients | Initial stage | Survival | Important prognostic factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 7,748 | Ib-II | 32.9%
| Histologic type |
| Age | ||||
| Number of metastasis | ||||
| Barter et al. [ | 88 | I-IV | 2.3% | Platinum-based chemotherapy |
| Anraku et al. [ | 71 (cervical cancer) | 54.6% | Resectability of lung lesions | |
| 62 (uterine body cancer) | Disease free interval | |||
| Fuller et al. [ | 15 | I-IV | 36% | Event-free duration |
| Resectability of lung lesions | ||||
| Shiromizu et al. [ | 519 | Ib-IIb | 36% | Platinum-based chemotherapy |
| Tumor marker | ||||
| Resectability of lung lesions | ||||
| Present study | 56 | I-IV | 32.8 mo | Adjuvant chemotherapy |
| Detection number of pulmonary metastatic lesion | ||||
| Resectability of lung lesions |
5-Year survival,
Overall survival.
Fig. 3.The relationship between event-free duration (EFD) and overall survival. Overall survival becomes longer with increasing EFD. Overall survival increases abruptly after EFD reaches 24 months (p=0.019).
Fig. 4.Overall survival by resectability. The resection group has better overall survival than the non-resection group (log-rank test, p=0.025).