Literature DB >> 8343259

Carcinoma of the cervical stump: a review of 213 cases.

I Barillot1, J C Horiot, J Cuisenier, J Pigneux, S Schraub, R Rozan, H Pourquier, N Daly, C Vrousos, R Keiling.   

Abstract

From 1970 to 1987, 213 cases of carcinoma of the cervical stump were accrued in a multi-institutional prospective cooperative study. This group accounted for 5.5% of cervical carcinoma diagnosed during the same period. 13 had in situ carcinoma and 200 had invasive carcinoma (96% squamous cell carcinoma, 4% adenocarcinoma). Radiotherapy alone (external and brachytherapy) was given to 77%, brachytherapy and surgery to 15% and surgery alone to 8%). FIGO stage distribution was: I (31%), IIa (15%), IIb (27%), IIIa (5%), IIIb (17%) and IV (5%). Five-year locoregional control per stage was 100% in Ia, 85% in Ib, 82% in IIa, 71% in IIb, 45% in IIIa, 54% in IIIb and 30% in IV. Corrected 5-year survival per stage was 82% in Ib, 78% in IIa, 73% in IIb, 69% in IIIa, 38% in IIIb and 0% in IV. The diameter of disease in stage II strongly influenced the 5-year locoregional control (81% for tumours of less than 3 cm vs. 68% for tumours more than 3 cm). Lymphangiogram was associated with a 44.5% 5-year locoregional control when positive vs. 74% when non-positive. Brachytherapy was advantageous in obtaining locoregional control in patients receiving external irradiation and brachytherapy: 81.5% vs. 38.5% in patients treated with external radiotherapy alone. Surgery was performed only for in situ carcinoma and for part of stages Ia, Ib and IIa. There is no significant difference in locoregional control at equal stage between radiotherapy alone and treatment schemes including surgery. However, lethal complications were observed in 6% of the patients of the surgical group as compared to 0.6% of the patients treated with radiotherapy alone. Radical radiotherapy seems to provide similar results of locoregional control and survival at equal stages in carcinoma of the cervical stump compared to carcinoma developed on an intact uterus. The rate of severe complications reported with the French-Italian glossary is 13% for G3 and 3% for G4, which is close to the observed rate during the same period in our series of radical radiotherapy to the intact uterus.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8343259     DOI: 10.1016/0959-8049(93)90063-l

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Cancer        ISSN: 0959-8049            Impact factor:   9.162


  5 in total

1.  Retrospective analysis of surgery for cervical stump carcinoma at early stage.

Authors:  Zhen Shen; Ying Zhou; Yong Cheng; Min Li; Dabao Wu
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-11-27

2.  Preoperative external beam radiotherapy and reduced dose brachytherapy for carcinoma of the cervix: survival and pathological response.

Authors:  Alexandre A Jacinto; Marcus S Castilho; Paulo E R S Novaes; Pablo R Novick; Gustavo A Viani; João V Salvajoli; Robson Ferrigno; Antonio Cássio A Pellizzon; Stella S S Lima; Maria A C Maia; Ricardo C Fogaroli
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2007-02-22       Impact factor: 3.481

3.  Characteristics, complications, and outcomes of early-stage cervical stump carcinoma: laparoscopy versus laparotomy.

Authors:  Zhiying Lu; Chenyan Guo; Ting Wang; Junjun Qiu; Keqin Hua
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2021-02       Impact factor: 1.671

4.  Cervical Stump Cancer Treated With Radiotherapy Using Computed Tomography-Guided Brachytherapy.

Authors:  Kohei Okada; Takahiro Oike; Ken Ando; Nobuteru Kubo; Tatsuya Ohno
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2021-03-09

5.  Combined intra-cavitary and interstitial image-guided adaptative brachytherapy for cervical stump carcinomas: technical and clinical results of six patients.

Authors:  Florent Guillemin; Anne-Agathe Serre; Frédéric Gassa; Fabrice Lorchel; Magali Sandt; Frédéric Lafay; Julien Charret; Corinne Rannou; Pascal Pommier
Journal:  J Contemp Brachytherapy       Date:  2022-05-26
  5 in total

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