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Cervical Carcinosarcoma: Current Understanding on Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, Management and Future Perspectives.

Xinyao ShuYuwen ZhouGuixia WeiXiaorong ChenMeng Qiu
Published in: Clinical Medicine Insights. Oncology (2021)
Cervical carcinosarcoma (CCS) is a rare aggressive tumor which was referred to as a sarcoma initially with its morbidity less than 1% of all cervical cancers. Four theories have been proposed for the pathogenesis of CCS. The "metaplastic theory," also called "monoclonal theory," has been widely accepted so far. The most common clinical symptom of CCS is abnormal vaginal bleeding. CCS is much less common than the counterparts in uterine corpus and usually confused with uterine carcinosarcoma (UCS) or common cervical cancer. The management for CCS has been mainly extrapolated from studies of UCS or cervical cancers. However, CCS has its special anatomical position and biological behaviors and is usually diagnosed at an early stage than UCS. Currently, there is no consensus on the survival, management and prognosis factors of CCS. We reviewed and summarized the literatures regarding to the epidemiology, clinical presentations, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of CCS for providing clinicians with comprehensive information to diagnose and treat this malignancy.
Keyphrases
  • early stage
  • palliative care
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • risk factors
  • radiation therapy
  • lymph node
  • social media
  • free survival
  • sentinel lymph node