Literature DB >> 29190319

Clinical consequences of upfront pathology review in the randomised PORTEC-3 trial for high-risk endometrial cancer.

S M de Boer1, B G Wortman2, T Bosse3, M E Powell4, N Singh5, H Hollema6, G Wilson7, M N Chowdhury5, L Mileshkin8, J Pyman9, D Katsaros10, S Carinelli11, A Fyles12, C M McLachlin13, C Haie-Meder14, P Duvillard15, R A Nout16, K W Verhoeven-Adema17, H Putter18, C L Creutzberg16, V T H B M Smit3.   

Abstract

Background: In the PORTEC-3 trial, women with high-risk endometrial cancer (HR-EC) were randomised to receive pelvic radiotherapy (RT) with or without concurrent and adjuvant chemotherapy (two cycles of cisplatin 50 mg/m2 in weeks 1 and 4 of RT, followed by four cycles of carboplatin AUC5 and paclitaxel 175 mg/m2). Pathology review was required before patient enrolment. The aim of this analysis was to evaluate the role of central pathology review before randomisation. Patients and methods: A total of 1295 cases underwent pathology review to confirm HR-EC in the Netherlands (n = 395) and the UK (n = 900), and for 1226/1295 (95%) matching review and original reports were available. In total, 329 of these patients were enrolled in the PORTEC-3 trial: 145 in the Netherlands and 184 in the UK, comprising 48% of the total PORTEC-3 cohort of 686 participants. Areas of discrepancies were evaluated, and inter-observer agreement between original and review opinion was evaluated by calculating the kappa value (κ).
Results: In the 1226 pathology reviews, 6356 selected items were evaluable for both original and review pathology. In 43% of cases at least one pathology item changed after review. For 102 patients (8%), this discrepancy led to ineligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial, most frequently due to differences in the assessment of histological type (34%), endocervical stromal involvement (27%) and histological grade (19%). Lowest inter-observer agreement was found for histological type (κ = 0.72), lymph-vascular space invasion (κ = 0.72) and histological grade (κ = 0.70).
Conclusion: Central pathology review by expert gynaeco-pathologists changed histological type, grade or other items in 43% of women with HR-EC, leading to ineligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial in 8%. Upfront pathology review is essential to ensure enrolment of the target trial-population, and to avoid over- or undertreatment, especially when treatment modalities with substantial toxicity are involved. This study is registered with ISRCTN (ISRCTN14387080, www.controlled-trials.com) and with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00411138).
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29190319      PMCID: PMC5834053          DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdx753

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Oncol        ISSN: 0923-7534            Impact factor:   32.976


Key Message In the PORTEC-3 trial, central pathology review before randomisation by expert gynaeco-pathologists changed histological items in 43% of HR-EC patients. This led to ineligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial in 8% of patients. Upfront pathology review is recommended for future trials as well as in daily practice to ensure enrolment of the target trial-population and to avoid over- or undertreatment.

Introduction

Adjuvant treatment of women with endometrial cancer (EC) is based on clinicopathological risk factors, such as histological grade, myometrial invasion, age and lymph-vascular space invasion (LVSI) [1-3]. A minority of patients (15%) have high-risk disease features, which include endometrioid endometrial carcinoma (EEC) of FIGO stage I grade 3 with deep invasion or with substantial LVSI; stage II or III EEC; or non-endometrioid histologies (NEEC) stage I–III [1-4]. For these patients higher risks of distant metastases and EC-related death have been reported, and adjuvant chemotherapy may be considered [5-8]. As these high-risk criteria comprise different features of the pathology diagnosis, reproducibility is essential. Studies of pathology review by expert subspecialty pathologists, however, have shown that evaluation of female reproductive tract pathology had the highest rates of discrepancies between original and review pathology assessment including discrepancies with consequences for treatment [9]. Challenges for pre-treatment pathology review are that review is time-consuming and expensive, that timelines are tight and logistical procedures are complicated. The PORTEC-3 trial is an international randomised phase III trial of adjuvant therapy in high-risk EC (HR-EC). Women with HR-EC were randomly allocated (1 : 1) to pelvic radiotherapy (RT) alone or RT plus concurrent and adjuvant chemotherapy. Primary end points are overall survival and failure-free survival. To select patients with true HR-EC and avoid unnecessary intensive treatment in lower-risk cases, upfront pathology review was carried out by expert gynaeco-pathologists of the participating groups to confirm HR-EC and eligibility for the study. The current analysis was done to establish the value of upfront pathology review. The aims were to explore the proportion of patients who were ineligible for the PORTEC-3 trial after pathology review, and to evaluate inter-observer variability between original and review pathology assessments.

Methods

Study design and participants

PORTEC-3 is a randomised Intergroup trial led by the Dutch Gynaecological Oncology Group, with participating groups MRC-NCRI (UK), ANZGOG (Australia and New Zealand), MaNGO (Italy), Fedegyn (France) and CCTG (Canada). Surgery comprised hysterectomy with salpingo-oophorectomy. Lymphadenectomy was at the discretion of the participating centres. For serous or clear cell cancers, surgical staging including omentectomy; peritoneal biopsies and lymphadenectomy was recommended. Details on patient selection and treatment have been described in a previous publication [10]. Eligible patients had EEC of FIGO 2009 stage 1A grade 3 with LVSI; IB grade 3; stage II, IIIA, IIIB or IIIC; or NEEC stage IA–III. Patients were randomised (1 : 1) to RT (48.6 Gy) or RT plus adjuvant chemotherapy (two cycles of cisplatin 50 mg/m2 in weeks 1 and 4 of RT, followed by four cycles of carboplatin AUC5 and paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 every 3 weeks). Written informed consent (IC) was obtained from all patients. The protocol was approved by the Dutch Cancer Society and the Ethics committees. Participating groups obtained their own IRB and ethics approvals and were funded by separate grants.

Procedures

Each participating group had appointed expert gynaeco-pathologists as reviewers for the study. After surgery, the pathology diagnosis was made by the regional pathologist. In case of HR-EC, all histopathology slides and a copy of the pathology report were sent for pathology review as part of patient management, to confirm HR-EC within 1 week, with the aim to ensure that only true HR-EC cases were informed and enrolled in the trial. If IC was given, pathology review for the PORTEC-3 trial was completed with trial-specific items. Upon consent for storage of tumour tissue for translational research a formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE)-block was centrally stored. All other blocks and slides were sent back to the referring centre. The items for original and review pathology included WHO histological type, grade, depth of myometrial invasion, distance to serosa or serosal breach, LVSI, cervical stromal involvement, involvement of the tubes and/or ovaries and lymph node involvement. Histological type was evaluated as endometrioid, serous, clear cell, mixed (endometrioid with serous/clear cell components), mucinous, or other histologies according to WHO-classification [11]. Mixed tumours were classified as serous or clear cell when this component was at least 25%, otherwise as mixed. Mucinous tumours were grouped with EEC for analysis. Histological grading was done according to WHO [11]. NEEC was considered high grade per definition (grade 3). The differences in histological grading between original and review pathology were evaluated for EEC. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) was carried out only incidentally, at the discretion of the review pathologist and only if FFPE-blocks were available at time of the central review process. For the current analysis, anonymised original and review pathology reports from both randomised and non-randomised patients in the Netherlands (NL) and the UK (UK) were assessed. These two countries were chosen as they had the largest number of patients in the trial (together 48%) and all pathology reviews had been done at two centres in each country. For the UK patients, the review pathologist provided a short confirmation of HR-EC and eligibility. For the randomised patients, the review report was completed after IC was given.

Outcomes

Discrepancies between original and central pathology review were assessed as discrepancies with and without change of eligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial. Reasons for non-eligibility were checked by two expert gynaeco-pathologists (TB and NS).

Statistical analysis

The data were collected in a SPSS database (version 23.0). For the comparison of the pathology items, Cohen’s kappa value (κ) was used [12]. For the interpretation of the κ values the scale proposed by Landis and Koch was used [13]. Differences between eligible women who were included or declined the study were analysed by the χ2 test. Items with P-values <0.05 were considered significant.

Results

Population and compliance

The PORTEC-3 trial included 686 patients (2006–2013), of whom 145 were recruited in NL and 184 in the UK. Slides from 1295 patients (395 NL, 900 UK) were sent for pathology review. Fifteen original pathology reports (9 NL, 6 UK) were not available for analysis. Fifty-four patients (18 NL, 36 UK) were ineligible based on the original pathology report, which was confirmed by pathology review and they were therefore excluded from the analysis. A total of 1226 patients (368 NL, 858 UK) were eligible based on local pathology and were included in this analysis (see Figure 1, Table 1 and supplementary Table S1, available at Annals of Oncology online).
Figure 1.

CONSORT diagram.

Table 1.

Major pathology criteria of the eligible patients (n = 1226)

Major pathologic criteriaNL patients (n = 368)
UK patients (n = 858)
n%n%
Age<6010037%23928%
60–6911041%37344%
≥705822%24328%
Missing1003
FIGO stage (2009)IA7220%13816%
IB9326%17821%
II9927%26331%
IIIA4312%9712%
IIIB185%627%
IIIC4011%10112%
Missing319
Histological typeEndometrioid or mucinous26271%50159%
Serous or mixed serous6618%19323%
Clear cell or mixed clear cell318%11113%
Othera92%455%
Missing08
Histological grade18122%15518%
25314%13516%
312735%20124%
NEEC10729%35442%
Missing013
Myometrial invasion<50%13537%21538%
≥50%23363%34662%
Missing0297
Growth through serosaYes216%314%
No34694%67596%
Missing1152
Cervical glandular involvementYes13538%17243%
No22462%23057%
Missing9456
Cervical stromal involvementYes13838%33947%
No22562%38253%
Missing5137
LVSIYes19854%28760%
No16946%19440%
Missing1377
Involvement of the ovariesYes4613%679%
No32287%66691%
Missing0125
Lymph node involvementNot applicable25269%55366%
No malignancy7320%18422%
Metastasis4111%10112%
Missing220
Parametrial involvementYes2413%6116%
No16787%32684%
Missing177471

Missing values were not taken into account to the percentages.

The pathology criteria of the NL versus the UK patients were based on review pathology.

Other histology includes undifferentiated, carcinosarcoma or mixed combinations other than serous/clear cell with endometrioid.

FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics; LVSI, lymph-vascular space invasion; EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer; NEEC, non-endometrioid endometrial cancer.

Major pathology criteria of the eligible patients (n = 1226) Missing values were not taken into account to the percentages. The pathology criteria of the NL versus the UK patients were based on review pathology. Other histology includes undifferentiated, carcinosarcoma or mixed combinations other than serous/clear cell with endometrioid. FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics; LVSI, lymph-vascular space invasion; EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer; NEEC, non-endometrioid endometrial cancer. CONSORT diagram.

Discrepancies and inter-observer variability

A total of 6356 pathology items were evaluable for both original and review pathology. For 679 items (11%) there was a discrepancy between original and review pathology. The highest agreement was found for serosal breach (98%) and cervical stromal involvement (94%), and most disagreement for histological type (15%) and grade (20%; see Table 2).
Table 2.

Inter-observer variability between original and review pathology report for the total cohort

Total cohort
Pathology itemTotal number available for analysisaMissing itemsTotal discrepanciesDisagreement %bLeading to ineligibilityLeading to ineligibility %cNot leading to ineligibilityNot leading to ineligibility %dκ value
Histological type1217918515%3519%15081%0.72
Histological grade (EEC only)701013920%1914%12086%0.70
Myometrial invasion9233048810%78%8192%0.79
Cervical glandular involvement6266007312%00%73100%0.73
Cervical stromal involvement1063163696%2739%4261%0.87
LVSI76246410113%44%9796%0.72
Growth through serosa1064162242%00%24100%0.76
Total6356170267911%9214%58786%NA

Total number of pathology items available for comparison between original and review pathology.

Total discrepancies/total number of pathology items available for analysis.

Number of pathology items leading to ineligibility/total discrepancies.

Number of pathology items not leading to ineligibility/total discrepancies.

LVSI, lymph vascular space invasion; EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer.

Inter-observer variability between original and review pathology report for the total cohort Total number of pathology items available for comparison between original and review pathology. Total discrepancies/total number of pathology items available for analysis. Number of pathology items leading to ineligibility/total discrepancies. Number of pathology items not leading to ineligibility/total discrepancies. LVSI, lymph vascular space invasion; EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer. In 532 cases (43%) at least one pathology item changed after review, which led to ineligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial in 8% (n = 102; Table 3). Most frequent reasons were change of histological type (34%, n = 35), cervical stromal involvement (27%, n = 27) and change of histological grade in 19% (n = 19), which was similar between the NL and UK cohorts. Eighty-three of these 102 became low risk after central pathology review, while in 19 cases the histological type was reclassified as carcinosarcoma; these were therefore still high risk but were not eligible for the PORTEC-3 trial.
Table 3.

Reasons for ineligibility of 102 patients based on pathological review report

Pathology variablesCohort (n = 102)
NL cohort (n = 42)
UK cohort (n = 60)
n%n%n%
Histological type353414332135
Histologic gradea19197171220
Myometrial invasion773747
Cervical involvement272712291525
LVSI442523
Otherb1010410610
Total ineligible patients1021004210060100
Percentage of total cohort10284211607

Grade shift for endometrioid endometrial carcinoma.

Other reasons included the absence of involvement of the ovaries, tube or parametrium, or other primary tumour site (cervix, tube or adnex).

LVSI, lymph vascular space invasion; NL, Netherlands; UK, United Kingdom.

Reasons for ineligibility of 102 patients based on pathological review report Grade shift for endometrioid endometrial carcinoma. Other reasons included the absence of involvement of the ovaries, tube or parametrium, or other primary tumour site (cervix, tube or adnex). LVSI, lymph vascular space invasion; NL, Netherlands; UK, United Kingdom. Highest rates of inter-observer variability were found for histological type (κ = 0.72), LVSI (κ = 0.72) and histological grade (κ = 0.70; Table 2). See supplementary Table S2, available at Annals of Oncology online for results by country and supplementary Figure S1, available at Annals of Oncology online. Lowest inter-observer variability was found for cervical stromal invasion (κ = 0.87), with overall agreement of 94%. However, a discrepancy here led to ineligibility for the trial in 27/69 (39%) of cases. Serosal breach was present in only 5% of cases. Although agreement was high for both countries (97% and 99%), κ values differed (NL κ = 0.83 versus UK κ = 0.63), showing that κ values are less reliable for items with few observations.

Histological type and grade

Figure 2 shows the agreement of histological classification and grade. Overall agreement of histological type was 85%; discrepancies led to ineligibility in 19% of cases (Table 2). Discrepancies were found for all histologies, although the agreement was highest for EEC.
Figure 2.

Histological type (A) and histological grade evaluation (B) in original and review pathology.

Histological type (A) and histological grade evaluation (B) in original and review pathology. The overall agreement for histological grade was 80%; 16% (n = 113) were downgraded at review pathology, with most frequent shifts (76 cases) from grade 2 to 1. In 4% (n = 26), the grade was higher at review.

Discussion

In the PORTEC-3 trial of adjuvant RT with or without chemotherapy for women with HR-EC, upfront pathology review was carried out before patient counselling to ensure that only true HR-EC patients were informed about the trial, and that the trial only enrolled true HR-EC cases. The expert gynaeco-pathology review changed the eligibility for 102 women (8%), most frequently due to changes in histological type or cervical stromal involvement. These lower-risk patients did therefore not risk receiving more intensive and potentially toxic treatment. Furthermore, a true HR-EC study population in the PORTEC-3 trial was ensured. For 19 patients the histological type changed to carcinosarcoma and although they were high risk, they were not eligible for the trial. The inter-observer agreement between original and review pathology was highest for cervical stromal invasion. The most frequent discrepancies were found for histological type, histological grade and presence of LVSI. While many of these discrepancies did not affect eligibility for the current study, they were important for prognosis and adjuvant treatment of patients in clinical practice. Discrepancies in gynaeco-pathology diagnosis between original and review pathology have been reported before. A Canadian study reported EC as the tumour site with most frequent differences in pathological assessment [14]. Another Canadian cohort reported major discrepancies in 8% of biopsies and hysterectomy specimens taken together, and in 12% of hysterectomy specimens. The most frequent diagnostic discrepancies were assessment of myometrial invasion and histological subtype [15]. In the PORTEC-1 and -2 trials pathology review showed that 24% and 14%, respectively, of patients were in retrospect ineligible, while this was 8% for the PORTEC-3 trial [1, 16, 17]. Eligibility in the PORTEC-1 and -2 studies was determined by grade, myometrial invasion and histological type. Differences in eligibility were often caused by shift of grade 2 to grade 1, while such grade shift did not affect the PORTEC-3 trial where patients had to have either grade 3 or NEEC or advanced stages. Minor discrepancies in grade or histology changed the eligibility for the PORTEC-3 trial in only a minority of patients. However, some shift of grade 2 to grade 1 was seen in the PORTEC-3 trial as well. Previous studies have shown that the intermediate grade is the least reproducible and that a two-tiered grading system assessing high versus low grade would be preferable [18-20]. The lower inter-observer variation in the current study could also reflect the increasing standardisation of pathology criteria and subspecialty training. Frequent causes of discrepancies were assessment of histological type and cervical involvement. Several studies have addressed challenges in diagnosing serous, clear cell and mixed cancers, the level of agreement varying from 62% to 83% [21-23]. In the study by Han et al. [21], there was consensus on histological type in 72% of cases. With a panel of three IHC markers the agreement increased to 96% [21]. The use of IHC was not routine practice in the period of the PORTEC-3 trial and was only carried out in incidental cases. Variations in defining cervical stromal involvement have also been reported in a study of 76 cases reviewed by 6 expert gynaeco-pathologists with agreement in only 50%. Difficulties comprised the definition of the junction between the lower uterine segment and the endocervix, and the distinction between unattached tumour components or true cervical stromal involvement [24]. A limitation of this study could be that the pathology reviews took place at four university centres, and inter-observer variations between these gynaeco-pathologists were not assessed. The percentages of major discrepancies were, however, quite similar between the two countries. In the PORTEC-2 trial, higher risk of distant metastasis and lower survival were found for patients who were considered ‘high-risk’ after central review pathology, suggesting that the review pathology was more reliable to predict prognosis when compared with the original pathology [16]. Creating a well-defined trial population with confirmed eligibility by upfront pathology review should be considered the standard for future scientific studies. Expert consultation is being increasingly used, but pathology review might not be part of the standard procedure, because it is time consuming and expensive. To this purpose, further standardisation of pathology criteria, expert education and subspecialisation in gynaeco-pathology are essential, as well as rapid access to expert consultation. The transition to digital pathology will greatly facilitate rapid consultation. Introduction of IHC and molecular analysis using the TCGA molecular subgroup classification will further improve risk assignment [25, 26]. A substantial proportion of eligible women declined participation in the trial, mostly because they did not want to receive chemotherapy. Younger patients and those with a more advanced stage of disease more often consented to participate in the trial (supplementary Table S1, available at Annals of Oncology online). The potential treatment consequences for patients should be the main reason to incorporate pathology review in daily practice. In the current study, most patients with discrepancies were downgraded and were spared unnecessary treatment. In conclusion, upfront pathology review by expert gynaeco-pathologists identified changes in histological type, grade or other items in 43% of patients. Of these, 8% of patients were found ineligible for the trial. This resulted in a true HR-EC population and reliable pathology assessment in the PORTEC-3 trial, which ensures the quality of future translational research. Upfront pathology review is to be preferred in future gynaecological oncology trials and in daily practice. The transition to digital pathology will strongly facilitate rapid expert pathology consultation. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file.
  15 in total

Review 1.  Evolution of adjuvant treatment in endometrial cancer-no evidence and new questions?

Authors:  S Marnitz; C Köhler; N Gharbi; S Kunze; K Jablonska; J Herter
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2018-08-15       Impact factor: 3.621

Review 2.  Endometrial cancer.

Authors:  Vicky Makker; Helen MacKay; Isabelle Ray-Coquard; Douglas A Levine; Shannon N Westin; Daisuke Aoki; Ana Oaknin
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2021-12-09       Impact factor: 65.038

3.  Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy versus radiotherapy alone for women with high-risk endometrial cancer (PORTEC-3): final results of an international, open-label, multicentre, randomised, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Stephanie M de Boer; Melanie E Powell; Linda Mileshkin; Dionyssios Katsaros; Paul Bessette; Christine Haie-Meder; Petronella B Ottevanger; Jonathan A Ledermann; Pearly Khaw; Alessandro Colombo; Anthony Fyles; Marie-Helene Baron; Ina M Jürgenliemk-Schulz; Henry C Kitchener; Hans W Nijman; Godfrey Wilson; Susan Brooks; Silvestro Carinelli; Diane Provencher; Chantal Hanzen; Ludy C H W Lutgens; Vincent T H B M Smit; Naveena Singh; Viet Do; Romerai D'Amico; Remi A Nout; Amanda Feeney; Karen W Verhoeven-Adema; Hein Putter; Carien L Creutzberg
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2018-02-12       Impact factor: 41.316

Review 4.  Gynecological Cancers Translational, Research Implementation, and Harmonization: Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup Consensus and Still Open Questions.

Authors:  Marina Bagnoli; Ting Yan Shi; Charlie Gourley; Paul Speiser; Alexander Reuss; Hans W Nijman; Carien L Creutzberg; Suzy Scholl; Anastassia Negrouk; Mark F Brady; Kosei Hasegawa; Katsutoshi Oda; Iain A McNeish; Elise C Kohn; Amit M Oza; Helen MacKay; David Millan; Katherine Bennett; Clare Scott; Delia Mezzanzanica
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2019-02-26       Impact factor: 6.600

5.  Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy versus radiotherapy alone in women with high-risk endometrial cancer (PORTEC-3): patterns of recurrence and post-hoc survival analysis of a randomised phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Stephanie M de Boer; Melanie E Powell; Linda Mileshkin; Dionyssios Katsaros; Paul Bessette; Christine Haie-Meder; Petronella B Ottevanger; Jonathan A Ledermann; Pearly Khaw; Romerai D'Amico; Anthony Fyles; Marie-Helene Baron; Ina M Jürgenliemk-Schulz; Henry C Kitchener; Hans W Nijman; Godfrey Wilson; Susan Brooks; Sergio Gribaudo; Diane Provencher; Chantal Hanzen; Roy F Kruitwagen; Vincent T H B M Smit; Naveena Singh; Viet Do; Andrea Lissoni; Remi A Nout; Amanda Feeney; Karen W Verhoeven-Adema; Hein Putter; Carien L Creutzberg
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2019-07-22       Impact factor: 41.316

6.  Reproducibility of lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI) assessment in endometrial cancer.

Authors:  Elke E M Peters; Carla Bartosch; W Glenn McCluggage; Catherine Genestie; Sigurd F Lax; Remi Nout; Jan Oosting; Naveena Singh; Huub C S H Smit; Vincent T H B M Smit; Koen K Van de Vijver; Tjalling Bosse
Journal:  Histopathology       Date:  2019-06-10       Impact factor: 5.087

Review 7.  Incorporation of molecular characteristics into endometrial cancer management.

Authors:  Lisa Vermij; Vincent Smit; Remi Nout; Tjalling Bosse
Journal:  Histopathology       Date:  2020-01       Impact factor: 5.087

8.  Ten-year results of the PORTEC-2 trial for high-intermediate risk endometrial carcinoma: improving patient selection for adjuvant therapy.

Authors:  B G Wortman; C L Creutzberg; H Putter; I M Jürgenliemk-Schulz; J J Jobsen; L C H W Lutgens; E M van der Steen-Banasik; J W M Mens; A Slot; M C Stenfert Kroese; B van Triest; H W Nijman; E Stelloo; T Bosse; S M de Boer; W L J van Putten; V T H B M Smit; R A Nout
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 7.640

9.  Molecular Classification of the PORTEC-3 Trial for High-Risk Endometrial Cancer: Impact on Prognosis and Benefit From Adjuvant Therapy.

Authors:  Alicia León-Castillo; Stephanie M de Boer; Melanie E Powell; Linda R Mileshkin; Helen J Mackay; Alexandra Leary; Hans W Nijman; Naveena Singh; Pamela M Pollock; Paul Bessette; Anthony Fyles; Christine Haie-Meder; Vincent T H B M Smit; Richard J Edmondson; Hein Putter; Henry C Kitchener; Emma J Crosbie; Marco de Bruyn; Remi A Nout; Nanda Horeweg; Carien L Creutzberg; Tjalling Bosse
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2020-08-04       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  A Modern Approach to Endometrial Carcinoma: Will Molecular Classification Improve Precision Medicine in the Future?

Authors:  Simone Marnitz; Till Walter; Birgid Schömig-Markiefka; Tobias Engler; Stefan Kommoss; Sara Yvonne Brucker
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2020-09-10       Impact factor: 6.639

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