| Literature DB >> 33842163 |
Kohei Okada1, Takahiro Oike2, Ken Ando3, Nobuteru Kubo1, Tatsuya Ohno1.
Abstract
Cervical stump cancer, which arises in the remaining uterine cervix of a woman with a history of supravaginal hysterectomy, accounts for 1.6-4.4% of all cervical cancers. The close proximity of the rectosigmoid colon to the primary tumor, which is due to the absence of the uterine corpus, should be considered carefully in the treatment planning of brachytherapy. Although three-dimensional image-guided brachytherapy (3D-IGBT) is used widely to treat cervical cancer in those with an intact uterine corpus, the safety and efficacy of 3D-IGBT for cervical stump cancer remains unclear. Here, we report a case of cervical stump cancer (T3bN1M0) treated successfully with definitive radiotherapy, which combined external beam radiotherapy and computed tomography (CT)-based IGBT. By applying the dose prescription concept used for definitive brachytherapy of cervical cancer with an intact uterine corpus, IGBT achieved satisfactory dose conformity to the tumor while sparing the adjacent rectosigmoid colon. This led to local tumor control for three years and eight months, with no late adverse effects. This case suggests that radiotherapy using CT-based IGBT is a safe and effective treatment for cervical stump cancer.Entities:
Keywords: brachytherapy; cervical stump cancer; computed tomography; radiation therapy; rectosigmoid colon
Year: 2021 PMID: 33842163 PMCID: PMC8025798 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.13789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1T2-weighted magnetic resonance images of the cervical stump tumor.
(A) Time of diagnosis, sagittal plane. (B) Time of diagnosis, axial plane. (C) Before initiation of brachytherapy, sagittal plane. (D) Before initiation of brachytherapy, axial plane. Yellow arrows indicate the primary tumor. Blue arrows indicate the rectosigmoid colon located in close proximity to the tumor.
Figure 2Brachytherapy settings.
(A) The tandem (2 cm in depth) and ovoid applicators. (B, C) Representative images of computed tomography-based brachytherapy planning. (B) Axial plane in which the high risk-clinical target volume (HR-CTV, red) shows the maximal diameter. (C) Axial plane showing the cranial end of the HR-CTV. Note that the contours of HR-CTV are broadly covered by the iso-dose lines denoting 6 Gy (green), whereas those for the rectosigmoid colon (magenta) surrounding HR-CTV are not.
Figure 3Dose-volume parameters used for computed tomography-based image-guided brachytherapy.
(A) D90 (i.e., the minimum dose delivered to a given 90% of the target volume) of the high risk-clinical target volume (HR-CTV). (B) D2cc (i.e., maximum dose delivered to a given 2 cc of the target volume) of the rectosigmoid colon. (C) D2cc of the bladder. BT#1, #2, #3, and #4 indicate each brachytherapy session, respectively. The total equivalent dose in 2 Gy-fractions for external beam radiotherapy plus brachytherapy (EQD2) was calculated using an a/b ratio of 10 and 3 for the HR-CTV and for the organs at risk, respectively. Black dashed lines denote 6 Gy. Gray dashed lines (A), (B), and (C) denote 60 Gy, 75 Gy, and 90 Gy, respectively.