| Literature DB >> 35312947 |
María Pilar Barretina-Ginesta1, María Quindós2, Jesús Damián Alarcón3, Carmen Esteban4, Lydia Gaba5, César Gómez6, José Alejandro Pérez Fidalgo7, Ignacio Romero8, Ana Santaballa9, María Jesús Rubio-Pérez10.
Abstract
Endometrial cancer (EC) is the second most common gynecological malignancy worldwide, the first in developed countries [Sung et al. in CA Cancer J Clin 71:209-249, 2021]. Although a majority is diagnosed at an early stage with a low risk of relapse, an important proportion of patients will relapse. Better knowledge of molecular abnormalities is crucial to identify high-risk groups in early stages as well as for recurrent or metastatic disease for whom adjuvant treatment must be personalized. The objective of this guide is to summarize the current evidence for the diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of EC, and to provide evidence-based recommendations for clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Endometrial cancer; Guideline; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35312947 PMCID: PMC8986694 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-022-02799-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Frequency of most common targeted alterations in endometrial cancer according to histological subtype
| EEC | SC | CCC | UCS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTEN mutation | 64–80% G1–3 52–82% G1/G2 62–90% G3 | 2–3% | 0–21% | 11–33% |
| PI3KCA mutation | 22–59% G1–G3 38–54% G1/G2 45–59% G3 | 15–35% | 24–36% | 22–40% |
| PIK3R1 mutation | 9–43% G1–G3 19–38% G1/G2 31–41% G3 | 5–8% | 7–18% | 6–20% |
| KRAS mutation | 19–43% G1–G3 17–23% G1/G2 7–33% G3 | 2–6% | 2–14% | 10–17% |
| FGFR2 mutation | 10–18% G1–G3 11–13% G1/G2 14–16% G3 | 8% | 0% | 0–2% |
| CTTNB1 mutation | 19–37% G1–G3 24–28% G1/G2 19–40% G3 | 0–3% | 0% | 0–5% |
| MMR-d | 34–35% G1–G3 34% G1/G2 44% G3 | 0–3% | 11–14% | 3–6% |
| ARID1A mutation | 39–55% G1–G3 39–47% G1/G2 39–60% G3 | 7–11% | 14–21% | 10–24% |
| P53 mutation | 5–14% G1–G3 6–10% G1/G2 21–35% G3 | 59–93% | 28–46% | 44–91% |
| ERBB2 amplification | 1% G1–G3 3% G1/G2 4% G3 | 26–44% | 11% | 9% |
| POLE mutation | 13–15% G1–G3 11% G1/G2 20% G3 | 0–2% | 2–7% | 3–4% |
Modified from Urick and Bell [12]
Relationship between histotype and molecular classification
Modified from Huvila J et al. [15]
2009 FIGO staging system for endometrial cancer
| Stage I | Tumor confined to corpus uteri, including endocervical glandular involvement |
| IA | Tumor limited to the endometrium or invading less than half the myometrium |
| IB | Tumor invading one half or more of the myometrium |
| Stage II | Tumor invading the stromal connective tissue of the cervix but not extending beyond the uterus |
| Stage III | Tumor involving serosa, adnexa, vagina, or parametrium |
| IIIA | Tumor involving the serosa and/or adnexa (direct extension or metastasis) |
| IIIB | Vaginal involvement (direct extension or metastasis) or parametrial involvement |
| IIIC1 | Regional lymph node metastasis to pelvic lymph nodes |
| IIIC2 | Regional lymph node metastasis to para-aortic lymph nodes, with or without positive pelvic lymph nodes |
| Stage IV | Tumor invading bladder and/or bowel mucosa, and or distant metastasis |
| IVA | Tumor invading the bladder mucosa and/or bowel mucosa |
| IVB | Distant metastasis (includes metastasis to inguinal lymph nodes, intra-peritoneal disease, lung, liver, or bone) |
Prognostic risk groups—treatment recommendation
| Risk group | Previous description | Molecular adapted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Stage I endometrioid G1–2, < 50% myometrial invasion, LVSI negative | Stage I–II POLEmut endometrial carcinoma,no residual disease Stage IA MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma G1-2, with no or focal LVSI | No adjuvant treatment |
| Intermediate | Stage I endometrioid, G1–2, ≥ 50% myometrial invasion, LVSI negative Stage I endometrioid G3, < 50% myometrial invasion and LVSI negative | Stage IB MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma G1-2, with no or focal LVSI Stage IA MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma G3, with no or focal LVSI Stage IA p53abn without myometrial invasion Stage IA non-endometrioid (serous, clear cell, undifferentiated carcinoma, carcinosarcoma, mixed) without myometrial invasion | BVT |
| High-intermediate | Stage I EEC with substancial LVSI regardless of grade and myometrial invasion Stage I EEC, G3, ≥ 50% myometrial invasion, regardless of LVSI Stage II | Stage I MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma, with LVSI Stage IB MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma G3 Stage II MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma | Surgical staging negative: VBT No surgical staging: PRT + VBT Consider CT for high grade or substantial LVSI |
| High | Stage III-IVA EEC optimally debulked Non-endometrioid EC (serous or clear cell or undifferentiated carcinoma, or carcinosarcoma) | Stage III–IVA MMRd/NSMP endometrioid carcinoma with no residual disease Stage I–IVA p53abn endometrial carcinoma with myometrial invasion, with no residual disease Stage I–IVA NSMP/MMRd serous, undifferentiated carcinoma, carcinosarcoma, with myometrial invasion, with no residual disease | EBRT concurrent or sequential with CT CT alone as alternative |
| Advanced metastatic | Stage III–IVA with residual disease or Stage IVB | Stage III–IVA with residual disease of any molecular type Stage IVB regardless molecular type | CT (RT can be considered depending on residual disease) |
p53abn p53 abnormal, POLEmut polymerase-mutated, LVSI lymphovascular space invasion, MMRd mismatch repair deficient, NSMP non-specific molecular profile
For stage III–IVA POLEmut endometrial carcinoma and stage I–IVA MMRd or NSMP clear cell carcinoma with myometrial invasion, insufficient data are available to allocate these patients to a prognostic risk group in the molecular classification. Prospective registries are recommended