Radiation Oncology/Cervix/IA
Appearance
Front Page: Radiation Oncology | RTOG Trials | Randomized Trials | |
Cervix: Main Page | Overview | Micro-invasive | Early Stage Non-Bulky | Early Stage Bulky | Locally Advanced | Brachytherapy | Cervix Randomized | GOG Trials | RTOG Cervix |
Prognostic Factors
[edit | edit source]- Depth of stromal invasion (measured from base membrane of cervical epithelium)
- <3 mm (IA1): Parametrial invasion rate 0 - 2.3%, LN mets rate 0 - 5.3%
- >3 mm (IA2): Parametrial invasion rate 0 - 3.3%, LN mets rate 1.3 - 13.8% (average ~8%)
- Lymphovascular space invasion
- Clinical significance is controversial
- Strong correlation with depth of invasion and tumor volume; literature unclear if it is an independent prognostic factor
- Nevertheless, many GYN/ONC do not consider patients with LVSI+ to be Stage IA (including SGO and JSOG definitions)
- Tumor volume
- Clinical significance is controversial in IA
- Some data support volumetric measurement, but technique is slow and imprecise
- Confluence of invasive foci
- There appears to be no difference (FIGO vs. JSOG data)
- Grade
- Four studies did not find grade an independent prognostic variable
Treatment Overview
[edit | edit source]- IA1 and LVSI-
- Historically total hysterectomy a gold standard
- Demonstration of minimal risk of parametrial spread and LN+, with significant morbidity, resulted in shift to conization
- Cervical conization primary treatment today
- Brachytherapy alone probably a reasonable option in non-surgical candidates, based on the 2 series below
- NCCN.org:
- Extrafascial hysterectomy or
- Cone + observe if negative margins or
- Modified radical + PLND if LVSI+
- IA2 or LVSI+
- Some form of hysterectomy to evaluate parametrial space and LNs
- NCCN.org:
- Radical hysterectomy + PLND +/- aortic LN dissection or
- Pelvic RT + brachytherapy (75-80 Gy to Point A)
- Radical trachelectomy + LND if fertility preservation desired
Surgical Series
[edit | edit source]- Milan, 2005 (Italy) PMID 15670302 -- "Prognostic factors in microinvasive cervical squamous cell cancer: long-term results." (Raspagliesi F, Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2005 Jan-Feb;15(1):88-93.)
- Retrospective. 67 patients with IA1 treated with conization. Mean F/U 10 years
- Invasive recurrences: 4 patients (6%)
- Predictive factors: LVSI+, cone apical margin distance <10mm
- Italian CTF, 2003 (Italy) PMID 14658592 -- "The clinical outcome of patients with stage Ia1 and Ia2 squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix: a Cooperation Task Force (CTF) study." (Gadducci A, Eur J Gynaecol Oncol. 2003;24(6):513-6.)
- Retrospective, multi-institutional. 166 patients with IA (143 patients IA1, 23 patients IA2), treated with conization alone (18%, all IA1), total hysterectomy (49%), or radical hysterectomy (33%).
- Pelvic LN status: 0/67 LN+
- Recurrence: 5% intraepithelial and 2% invasive. IA1 recurrence 6%, IA2 recurrence 13%. Cone alone 10% (but none invasive), total hysterectomy 5%, radical hysterectomy 9%
- Conclusion: Conization can be a definitive treatement for Stage IA1. For Stage IA2, extrafascial hysterectomy might be adequate, need for LN dissection is questionable
- Oslo, 1989 PMID 2722048 -- "Follow-up study of 232 patients with stage Ia1 and 411 patients with stage Ia2 squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix (microinvasive carcinoma)." (Kolstad P, Gynecol Oncol. 1989 Jun;33(3):265-72.)
- Retrospective. 643 patients with IA. Follow up 3-17 years
- Surgery: recurrence 15/496 (3%). All salvaged with further surgery
- Brachytherapy alone: recurrence 0/136 (0%)
Radiotherapy Series
[edit | edit source]- Washington University, 1991 (1959-1986) PMID 1905690 -- "Radiotherapy alone for medically inoperable carcinoma of the cervix: stage IA and carcinoma in situ." (Grigsby PW, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 1991 Jul;21(2):375-8.)
- Retrospective. 21 patients with CIS and 34 patients with IA.
- RT for IA: BT alone (13 patients) to average 55 Gy to Point A, BT + Whole Pelvis (21 patients) to 14 Gy WP + 23.5 Gy parametrial boost with midline block + BT to 52 Gy to Point A
- Recurrence: 0/21 CIS, 1/34 IA in pelvis. No DM.
- Toxicity: severe complications 6%, in those getting WPRT + BT
- Conclusion: BT alone excellent treatment for both CIS and IA
- Oslo, 1989 PMID 2722048 -- "Follow-up study of 232 patients with stage Ia1 and 411 patients with stage Ia2 squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix (microinvasive carcinoma)." (Kolstad P, Gynecol Oncol. 1989 Jun;33(3):265-72.)
- Retrospective. 643 patients with IA. Follow up 3-17 years
- Surgery: recurrence 15/496 (3%). All salvaged with further surgery
- Brachytherapy alone: recurrence 0/136 (0%)
Review
[edit | edit source]- Milan, 2003 PMID 14693337 -- "Microinvasive squamous cell cervical carcinoma." (Raspagliesi F, Crit Rev Oncol Hematol. 2003 Dec;48(3):251-61.)