| Literature DB >> 35444805 |
Iwan Kurnia1, Syahrul Rauf1, Mochammad Hatta2, Sharvianty Arifuddin1, Yudi Maulana Hidayat3, Rosdiana Natzir4, Cahyo Kaelan5, Agussalim Bukhari6, Nugraha Utama Pelupessy1, Ilham Jaya Patelonggi7.
Abstract
Cervical cancer mostly caused by Human Papilloma Virus. Staging and therapy have been extensively studied, and highly correlated with the cellular development of oncogenesis. Mutation was caused by E6 and E7 oncoprotein, also inactivation of 2 tumor suppressor factors (pRB and p53). P53 also regulated MMP1, which dysregulation of MMP transcription would promote tumor metastasis, because of its role in extracellular matrix degradation in tumor invasion. Clinical staging of Cervical Cancer was based on Federation International of Gynaecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) classification from 2018. Management was divided into Surgery, Radiotherapy, and Chemotherapy.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35444805 PMCID: PMC9014365 DOI: 10.1016/j.amsu.2022.103415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med Surg (Lond) ISSN: 2049-0801
FIGO Staging of cervical cancer.
| Stage | Description |
|---|---|
| I | The carcinoma is strictly confined to the cervix (extension to the uterine corpus should be disregarded) |
| IA | Invasive carcinoma that can be diagnosed only by microscopy, with maximum depth of invasion <5 mm |
| IA1 | Measured stromal invasion depth of <3 mm |
| IA2 | Measured stromal invasion depth 23 mm and <5 mm |
| IB | Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest invasion of 25 mm (greater than Stage IA), lesion limited to the cervix uteri |
| IB1 | Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest stromal invasion of 25 mm, and greatest dimension of <2 cm |
| IB2 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of 22 cm and <4 cm |
| IB3 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of >4 cm |
| IB | Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest invasion of 25 mm (greater than Stage IA), lesion limited to the cervix uteri |
| IB1 | Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest stromal invasion of 25 mm, and greatest dimension of <2 cm |
| IB2 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of 22 cm and <4 cm |
| IB3 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of >4 cm |
| II | The carcinoma invades beyond the uterus, but has not extended into the lower third of the vagina or to the pelvic wall |
| IIA | A Involvement limited to the upper two-thirds of the vagina without parametrial invasion |
| IIA1 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of <4 cm |
| IIA2 | Invasive carcinoma with greatest dimension of ≥4 cm |
| IIB | With parametrial involvement but not up to the pelvic wall |
| III | The carcinoma invades beyond the uterus, but has not extended into the lower third of the vagina or to the pelvic wall |
| IIIA | T3 III T3a A The carcinoma involves the lower third of the vagina, with no extension to the pelvic wall |
| IIIB | Extension to the pelvic wall and/or hydronephrosis or nonfunctioning kidney (unless known to be due to another cause) |
| IIIC | Involvement of pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph nodes, irrespective of tumor size and extent (with r and p notations) |
| IIIC1 | Pelvic lymph node metastasis only |
| IIIC2 | Para-aortic lymph nodes metastasis |
| IV | The carcinoma has extended beyond the true pelvis or has involved (biopsy proven) the mucosa of the bladder or rectum (the presence of bullous edema is not sufficient to classify a case as Stage IV) |
| IVA | Spread to adjacent pelvic organs |
| IVB | Spread to distant organs |
Histopathological classification of cervical cancer.
Squamous carcinoma Keratinizing Large cell non keratinizing Small cell non keratinizing Verrucous |
Adeno carcinoma Endocervical Endometroid (adenoacanthoma) Clear cell - paramesonephric Clear cell - mesonephric Serous Intestinal |
Mixed carcinoma Adeno-squamous Mucoepidermoid Glossy cell Adenoid cystic |
Undifferentiated carcinoma |
Carcinoma tumor |
Malignant melanoma |
Malignant non-epithelial tumors Sarcoma: mixed Mullerian, leiomyosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma Lymphoma |
75% of cervical cancer were squamous cell carcinoma.
10–15% were adenocarcinoma, the rest were other types.
Pic 1HPV Mechanism of Action in deactivating Tumor Suppressor Gene [2].
Pic 2Carcinogenesis in persistent HPV [3]→16.
Pic 3MMP1 role in Cancer Progressivity [4].
Pic 4MMP1 role in tumor development and progressiveness [5].