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. 2018 Jul;28(6):1226-1231.
doi: 10.1097/IGC.0000000000001314.

ESGO Survey on Current Practice in the Management of Cervical Cancer

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Free article

ESGO Survey on Current Practice in the Management of Cervical Cancer

Lukas Dostalek et al. Int J Gynecol Cancer. 2018 Jul.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this survey was to acquire an overview of the current management of cervical cancer with an emphasis on the early disease stages.

Materials and methods: A hyperlink to the survey was sent to the European Society of Gynaecological Oncology Office database. The survey contained 6 groups of questions regarding the characteristics of respondents, pretreatment workup, management of the early stages of cervical cancer, adjuvant treatment, fertility-sparing treatment, and surveillance.

Results: In total, 566 responses were collected. The most frequent imaging method used in the workup was magnetic resonance imaging (74%), followed by computed tomography (54%) and positron emission tomography/computed tomography (25%). Conization or simple hysterectomy was a preferred procedure in stage T1a1 lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI)-positive for 79% of respondents, in stage T1a2 LVSI-negative for 58%, and in stage T1a2 LVSI-positive for 28%. Sentinel lymph node biopsy alone was reported in stage T1a1 by 17% and in stage T1b1 less than 2 cm by 9%, whereas systematic lymphadenectomy by 29% and 90% of respondents. Macrometastases, micrometastases, and isolated tumor cells in lymph nodes were considered indications for adjuvant treatment by 96%, 93%, and 68% of respondents, respectively. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was reported by 28% and 19% of respondents in fertility-sparing and nonsparing management in stage T1b1. Over 60% of respondents recommend primary surgery for their patients with T1b2 N0 disease and 81% of them use a combination of adverse prognostic factors as indication for adjuvant radiotherapy in pN0 disease.

Conclusions: The results of this survey indicate considerable differences in the workup and treatment of cervical cancer in current clinical practice.

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