| Literature DB >> 34962334 |
Andrea Giannini1,2, Ottavia D'Oria2, Benito Chiofalo1, Valentina Bruno1, Ermelinda Baiocco1, Emanuela Mancini1, Rosanna Mancari1, Cristina Vincenzoni1, Giuseppe Cutillo1, Enrico Vizza1.
Abstract
The present article aims to highlight the importance of changes of personalized surgical treatment for vulvar cancer. Current international literature regarding surgical treatment of vulvar cancer was evaluated. This included several studies and systematic reviews. Radical surgery approach, such as en bloc resection, was the first therapeutic option and the standard care for many years, even if burdened with a high complication rate and frequently disfiguring. Taussing and Way introduced radical vulvectomy approach with en bloc bilateral inguinal-femoral lymphadenectomy; modified radical vulvectomy was developed, with a wide radical excision of the primary tumor. The role of inguinofemoral lymphadenectomy (mono or bilateral) changed in the years too, particularly with the advent of SLN biopsy as minimally invasive surgical approach for lymph node staging, in patients with unifocal cancer <4 cm, without suspicious groin nodes. More personalized and conservative surgical approach, consisting of wide local or wide radical excisions, is necessary to reduce complications as lymphedema or sexual disfunction. The optimal surgical management of vulvar cancer needs to consider dimensions, staging, depth of invasion, presence of carcinoma at the surgical margins of resection and grading, with the goal of making the treatment as individualized as possible.Entities:
Keywords: Taylor therapy; inguinofemoral lymphadenectomy; radical vulvectomy; sentinel lymph node biopsy; vulvar cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34962334 PMCID: PMC9302990 DOI: 10.1111/jog.15103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obstet Gynaecol Res ISSN: 1341-8076 Impact factor: 1.697
FIGURE 1En bloc Way–Taussing radical vulvectomy showing butterfly skin incision
FIGURE 2Triple incision: A skin bridge is left between the vulval and the groin incisions
Literature review of the use of sentinel lymph nodes biopsy in vulvar cancer
| Authors | Years | Study type | Patients (groins) | Mapping method | Median FU | Groin recurrence (%) | Outcome in SLN negative patients (%, 95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| van der Zee (GROINSS‐V study) | 2008 | Prospective | 403 (623) | R + B | 35 (2–87) |
6/259 (2.3) unifocal disease; 8/276 (3) including multifocal disease | 3‐year DSS (97) |
| Oonk | 2010 | Prospective | 403 | R + B | 120 | 11 (2.7) | NA |
| Levenback (GOG 173) | 2012 | Prospective | 452 (772) | R + B | NA | NA | NA |
| Woelber | 2013 | Retrospective |
Primary SLN group = 74/106 Secondary SLN group = 32/106 | R | 33 (3–118) |
Primary SLN group = 4/74 (5.4); Secondary SLN group = 0 |
Primary SLN group = 3‐year DFS (72.5) Secondary SLN group = 3‐year DFS (92.5) |
| Robison | 2014 | Prospective | 86 | R + B | 58 | 4/86 (4.7) | NA |
| Te Grootenhuis | 2015 | Prospective | 377 | R + B | 105 (0–179) | 6/253 (2.5) unifocal disease |
5‐year DSS (93.5) 10‐year DSS (90.8) 5‐year OS |
| Klapdor | 2017 | Retrospective | 772 | R or B | 33 (0–156) | 2/69 (2.9) |
3‐year PFS (82.7; 72.3–92.7) 3‐year OS (92.7; 85.7–99.7) |
| Nica | 2019 | Retrospective | 159 (245) | R or R + B | 31 | 6/120 (5) |
1‐year PFS (90) 5‐year PFS (80) |
Abbreviations: B, blue dye; DFS, disease‐free survival; DSS, disease‐specific survival; OS, overall survival; PFS, progression‐free survival; R, radiotracer.