| Literature DB >> 29238915 |
A Santaballa1, X Matías-Guiu2, A Redondo3, N Carballo4, M Gil5, C Gómez6, M Gorostidi7, M Gutierrez8, A Gónzalez-Martín9.
Abstract
Endometrial cancer (EC) is the most common gynecological cancer in developed countries. Most patients are diagnosed at an early stage with a low risk of relapse. However, there is a group of patients with a high risk of relapse and poor prognosis. Despite the recent publication of randomized trials, the adjuvant treatment of high-risk EC is still to be defined and there are many open questions about the best approach and the right timing. Unfortunately, the survival of metastatic or recurrent EC is short, due to the poor results of chemotherapy and the lack of a second line of treatment. Advances in the knowledge of the molecular abnormalities in EC have permitted the development of promising targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Adjuvant treatment; Chemotherapy; Endometrial cancer; Radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29238915 PMCID: PMC5785608 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-017-1809-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Molecular features of endometrioid and serous endometrial cancer
| Biomarker | Alteration | Frequency in EEC% | Frequency in SC% |
|---|---|---|---|
| PTEN | Loss of function | 80 | 0–10 |
| K-RAS | Mutation | 25 | 4 |
| CTNNB4/β-catenin | Mutation/nuclear expression | 40 | 0–5 |
| MI | Microsatellite instability | 20–45 | 0–5 |
| PIK3CA | Mutation | 50 | 40 |
| ER, PR | Expression | 70–73 | 20–24 |
| ARID1A | Mutation/loss of function | 35 | 7 |
| Stathmin | Overexpression | 15 | 64 |
| HER 2 | Overexpression | 3–10 | 32 |
| E-cadherin | Loss of function | 5–50 | 60–90 |
| P16 | Loss of function | 8 | 45 |
| P53 | Mutation | 11 | 80–90 |
EEC Endometrioid endometrial cancer, SC Serous carcinoma
FIGO classification 2009
| Stage | Definition |
|---|---|
| IA | Tumor confined to the uterus, no or < ½ myometrial invasion |
| IB | Tumor confined to the uterus, > ½ myometrial invasion |
| II | Cervical stromal invasion, but not beyond the uterus |
| IIIA | Tumor invades serosa or adnexa |
| IIIB | Vaginal and/or parametrial involvement |
| IIIC1 | Pelvic node involvement |
| IIIC2 | Para-aortic involvement |
| IVA | Tumor invades bladder and/or bowel mucosa |
| IVB | Distant metastases including abdominal metastases and/or inguinal lymph nodes |
ESMO risk groups to guide adjuvant therapy use
| Risk group | Description |
|---|---|
| Low risk | Stage I endometrioid G1–2, < 50% myometrial invasion, LVSI negative |
| Intermediate risk | Stage I endometrioid, G1–2, ≥ 50% myometrial invasion, LVSI negative |
| High–intermediate risk | Stage I endometrioid, G3, < 50% myometrial invasion regardless of LVSI |
| Stage I G1–2, LVSI positive, regardless of depth of invasion | |
| High risk | Stage I EEC, G3, ≥ 50% myometrial invasion, regardless of LVSI |
| Stage II EEC | |
| Stage III EEC optimally debulked | |
| Non-endometrioid EC (serous or clear cell or undifferentiated carcinoma, or carcinosarcoma) |
LVSI lymphovascular invasion, EEC endometrioid endometrial cancer, EC endometrial cancer
Fig. 1Adjuvant treatment for endometrial cancer. LVSI lymphovascular invasion, VBT vaginal brachytherapy, CT chemotherapy, PRT pelvic radiotherapy, EEC endometrioid endometrial cancer, EC endometrial cancer.
Modified from endometrial cancer algorithms that refers to Colombo et al. [7]
SEOM guidelines recommendations for the management of endometrial cancer
| Diagnosis |
| TVUS and endometrial sampling should be considered the standard approach [II, B] |
| Women with EC should have contrast-enhanced MRI and chest RX before surgery [IV, A] |
| Hereditary endometrial guidelines |
| Molecular screening for LS should be performed in women with Amsterdam or Bethesda criteria and women with EC before 50 years [II, A]. Prophylactic surgery with hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy should be offered in women with LS mutations who have completed childbearing [IV, B] |
| Screening |
| Routine screening of asymptomatic women at average or increased risk of endometrial carcinoma is not recommended [II, A] |
| Staging |
| EC is surgically staged. The staging is based on FIGO 2009 [IV, A] |
| Surgical treatment |
| The standard surgical approach of endometrioid EC in early stages is laparoscopic [I, A] with total hysterectomy without vaginal cuff and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy [IA]. In low-risk EC LND is not recommended [II,A]. In intermediate and high-risk group, LND is recommended to guide surgical staging and adjuvant therapy [II, C]. SLNM in EC is still not recommended as standard treatment. In non-endometrioid early stages, complete staging and maximal surgical debulking is recommended [IV, A] |
| In advanced stages, a complete staging with maximal surgical debulking is recommended in patients with good performance status and resectable tumor [III, B]. Palliative surgery could be considered in patients with good performance status and metastasic disease [IV, A] |
| Fertility preservation could be offered in reproductive age patients with low-risk EC, but there is no the standard option [V, A]. Progestins are the recommended treatment [IV, B] |
| Adjuvant treatment |
| Low-risk patients do not require adjuvant treatment [I, A] |
| VBT is recommended for intermediate-risk patients [I, A] |
| In the intermediate–high-risk group, VBT is recommended in patients with surgical staging and node negative [III, B]. CT can be evaluated [III, B]. In patients with no surgical nodal staging, PRT and VBT is recommended [III, B] |
| In high-risk early stages, endometrioid EC, VBT [III, B] or PRT [III, B] are recommended. In early stages with non-endometrioid histologies VBT [IIIB] or PRT [I, B],CT can be evaluated [III, B]. The recommendation in stage III optimally debulked is CT, followed by PRT [I, B] |
| Treatment of advanced or recurrent disease |
| Surgical or local treatment (radiation in non-irradiated area) are options in patients with isolated centropelvic recurrence or single metastasic site [IV, A] |
| Endocrine therapy is recommended as a therapeutic alternative for those patients with well-differentiated tumors or a long disease-free interval [IV, A] |
| Carboplatin and paclitaxel is the standard option in metastatic or advanced endometrial cancer [I, A]. There is no standard CT for second line |
| Follow-up |
| Physical examination with a thorough speculum, pelvic, and rectovaginal examination is the most effective method for the detection of EC recurrences [IV, A] |
| Cytology evaluation and chest RX are not recommended in asymptomatic women, imaging test should be reserved for patients with suspected recurrence [IV, A] |