Litcius/Paper detail

Surgery-based radiation-free multimodality treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer

Che-Wei Chang, Szu‐Ting Yang, Hung‐Hsien Liu, Wen-Hsun Chang, Wen-Ling Lee, Peng-Hui Wang

2024Taiwanese Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) and 18 cycles of half-dose anti-angiogenic agent (bevacizumab 7.5 mg/kg). During the cervical SCC fighting journey, two unwanted adverse events (AEs) occurred. One was pseudo-progressive disease during the NAT treatment and pathology-confirmed upgrading FIGO stage IIIC1p (ypT2a1N1M0) after radical surgery and the other was the occurrence of hypothyroidism during the post operative adjuvant therapy. Based on this case we presented, we review the recent trend in the management of women with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC) using the radiation-free but surgery-based multimodality strategy and highlight the strengths and limitations about perioperative adjuvant therapy with dose-dense CT + IO + half-dose anti-angiogenic agent and maintenance treatment of half-dose IO combining with short-term single agent CT and following long-term half-dose anti-angiogenic agent. All underscore the possibility that women with LACC have an opportunity to receive surgery-based RT-free multi-modality strategy to manage their diseases with satisfactory results. Additionally, the evolving role of IO plus CT with/without anti-angiogenic agent functioning as either primary treatment or adjuvant therapy for the treatment of advanced CC has been in process continuously. Moreover, the patient's positive response to IO, pembrolizumab as an example, both during the primary and maintenance therapy, highlights the importance of integrating IO into CT regimens for CC, especially in cases where conventional therapies, RT as an example, are insufficient or who do not want to receive RT-based treatment. The sustained disease-free status of the patient over several years reinforces the potential of IO to significantly increase long-term survival outcomes in CC patients, particularly for those with LACC.

Topics & Concepts

MultimodalityMedicineCervical cancerRadiation therapySurgeryRadiologyCancerComputer scienceInternal medicineWorld Wide WebEndometrial and Cervical Cancer TreatmentsOvarian cancer diagnosis and treatmentUterine Myomas and Treatments