Litcius/Paper detail

Nomogram Predicting the Likelihood of Parametrial Involvement in Early-Stage Cervical Cancer: Avoiding Unjustified Radical Hysterectomies

Louise Benoit, Vincent Balaya, Benedetta Guani, Arnaud Bresset, Laurent Magaud, Hélène Bonsang‐Kitzis, Charlotte Ngô, Patrice Mathevet, Fabrice Lécuru

2020Journal of Clinical Medicine13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We aimed to establish a tool predicting parametrial involvement (PI) in patients with early-stage cervical cancer and select a sub-group of patients who would most benefit from a less radical surgery. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed patients from two prospective multicentric databases-SENTICOL I and II-from 2005 to 2012. Patients with early-stage cervical cancer (FIGO 2018 IA with lympho-vascular involvement to IIA1), undergoing radical surgery (hysterectomy or trachelectomy) with bilateral sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping with no metastatic node or PI on pre-operative imaging, were included. RESULTS: In total, 5.2% patients (11/211) presented a histologic PI. After univariate analysis, SLN status, lympho-vascular space invasion, deep stromal invasion and tumor size were significantly associated with PI and were included in our nomogram. Our predictive model had an AUC of 0.92 (IC95% = 0.86-0.98) and presented a good calibration. A low risk group, defined according to the optimal sensitivity and specificity, presented a predicted probability of PI of 2%. CONCLUSION: Patients could benefit from a two-step approach. Final surgery (i.e. radical surgery and/or lymphadenectomy) would depend on the SLN status and the probability PI calculated after an initial conization with bilateral SLN mapping.

Topics & Concepts

ParametrialMedicineNomogramCervical cancerStage (stratigraphy)Radical HysterectomyGynecologyOncologyCancerInternal medicineBiologyPaleontologyEndometrial and Cervical Cancer TreatmentsCervical Cancer and HPV ResearchBreast Cancer Treatment Studies