Risk for Pelvic Metastasis and Role of Pelvic Lymphadenectomy in Node-Positive Vulvar Cancer-Results from the AGO-VOP.2 QS Vulva Study.
Linn WoelberMonika HamplChristine Zu EulenburgKatharina PrieskeJohanna HambrechtSophie FuerstRuediger KlapdorSabine HeubleinPaul GassAnnika RohnerUlrich CanzlerSven BeckerMareike BommertDirk BauerschlagAgnieszka DeneckeLars HankerIngo RunnebaumnDirk Michael FornerFabienne SchochterMaximilian KlarRoxana SchwabMelitta KoepkeMatthias KalderPeer HantschmannDominik RatiuDominik DenschlagWillibald SchroederBenjamin TuschyKlaus BaumannAlexander MusteaPhilipp SoergelHolger BrongerGerd BauerschmitzJens KosseMartin C KochAtanas IgnatovJalid SehouliChristian DanneckerSven MahnerAnna JaegerPublished in: Cancers (2022)
The need for pelvic treatment in patients with node-positive vulvar cancer (VSCC) and the value of pelvic lymphadenectomy (LAE) as a staging procedure to plan adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) is controversial. In this retrospective, multicenter analysis, 306 patients with primary node-positive VSCC treated at 33 gynecologic oncology centers in Germany between 2017 and 2019 were analyzed. All patients received surgical staging of the groins; nodal status was as follows: 23.9% (73/306) pN1a, 23.5% (72/306) pN1b, 20.4% (62/306) pN2a/b, and 31.9% (97/306) pN2c/pN3. A total of 35.6% (109/306) received pelvic LAE; pelvic nodal involvement was observed in 18.5%. None of the patients with nodal status pN1a or pN1b and pelvic LAE showed pelvic nodal involvement. Taking only patients with nodal status ≥pN2a into account, the rate of pelvic involvement was 25%. In total, adjuvant RT was applied in 64.4% (197/306). Only half of the pelvic node-positive (N+) patients received adjuvant RT to the pelvis (50%, 10/20 patients); 41.9% (122/291 patients) experienced recurrent disease or died. In patients with histologically-confirmed pelvic metastases after LAE, distant recurrences were most frequently observed (7/20 recurrences). Conclusions: A relevant risk regarding pelvic nodal involvement was observed from nodal status pN2a and higher. Our data support the omission of pelvic treatment in patients with nodal status pN1a and pN1b.
Keyphrases
- lymph node
- rectal cancer
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- early stage
- ejection fraction
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- locally advanced
- sentinel lymph node
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- electronic health record
- papillary thyroid
- lymph node metastasis
- patient reported
- deep learning
- endometrial cancer
- big data