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. 2014 Sep;24(7):1286-91.
doi: 10.1097/IGC.0000000000000170.

Smokers with cervix cancer have more uterine corpus invasive disease and an increased risk of recurrence after treatment with chemoradiation

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Free article

Smokers with cervix cancer have more uterine corpus invasive disease and an increased risk of recurrence after treatment with chemoradiation

Linda Mileshkin et al. Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2014 Sep.
Free article

Abstract

Background: Smoking is a risk factor for cervix cancer and causes hypoxemia, which promotes tumor infiltration and potentially impacts on treatment outcome. We performed a retrospective study to determine if smokers had an increased risk of uterine corpus infiltration, which is associated with more advanced disease and/or treatment failure after primary chemoradiation.

Methods: Results from a prospective database of patients treated with primary chemoradiation for locally advanced cervix cancer with a pretreatment MRI were analyzed. Smoking status was assessed by self-report at presentation.

Results: Smoking status was recorded for 346 of the 362 patients with 98 current smokers (28%), 56 ex-smokers (16%), and 192 nonsmokers (55%). Median age was 58 years with ever-smokers having a younger age at diagnosis than nonsmokers. Histologic type, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage, tumor volume, and nodal involvement were similar across groups, as were toxicities of treatment. Ever-smokers were more likely to have corpus uterine invasion than nonsmokers. Ever-smokers had more recurrences than nonsmokers, with nonsmokers having a longer median overall survival (50.1 vs 38.7 months, P = 0.004) and relapse-free survival (46.8 vs 28.5 months, P = 0.003). In multifactor analysis, ever-smoking status was a significant predictor of developing corpus invasive disease and of inferior relapse-free and overall survival after treatment.

Conclusions: Smokers have a greater risk for developing corpus invasive cervix cancer. Although nonsmokers have an older age at diagnosis, they live longer and have fewer recurrences after a diagnosis of locally advanced carcinoma of the cervix.

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