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Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy

BACKGROUND: Radical hysterectomy and radiotherapy have long been mainstays of cervical cancer treatment. Early stage cervical cancer (FIGO stage IB1–IIA) is traditionally treated using radical surgery combined with radiotherapy, while locally advanced cervical cancer is treated using radiotherapy al...

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Autores principales: Yang, Jianbo, Ding, Chao, Zhang, Tenghui, Zhang, Liang, Lv, Tengfei, Ge, Xiaolong, Gong, Jianfeng, Zhu, Weiming, Li, Ning, Li, Jieshou
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4462117/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13014-015-0433-5
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author Yang, Jianbo
Ding, Chao
Zhang, Tenghui
Zhang, Liang
Lv, Tengfei
Ge, Xiaolong
Gong, Jianfeng
Zhu, Weiming
Li, Ning
Li, Jieshou
author_facet Yang, Jianbo
Ding, Chao
Zhang, Tenghui
Zhang, Liang
Lv, Tengfei
Ge, Xiaolong
Gong, Jianfeng
Zhu, Weiming
Li, Ning
Li, Jieshou
author_sort Yang, Jianbo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Radical hysterectomy and radiotherapy have long been mainstays of cervical cancer treatment. Early stage cervical cancer (FIGO stage IB1–IIA) is traditionally treated using radical surgery combined with radiotherapy, while locally advanced cervical cancer is treated using radiotherapy alone or chemoradiotherapy. In this retrospective study, we describe and analyse the presenting clinical features and outcomes in our cohort and evaluate possible risk factors for postoperative morbidity in women who underwent surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy (CRE). METHODS: One hundred sixty-six eligible cervical cancer patients who underwent surgery for CRE were retrospectively identified between September 2003 and July 2014 in a prospectively maintained database. Among them, 46 patients received radical radiotherapy (RRT) and 120 received radical surgery plus radiotherapy (RS + RT). Clinical features, postoperative morbidity and mortality, and risk factors for postoperative morbidity were analysed. RESULTS: RS + RT group patients were more likely to present with RTOG/EORTC grade III late morbidity (76.1 % vs 92.5 %; p = 0.004), while RRT group patients tended to show RTOG/EORTC grade IV late morbidity (23.9 % vs 7.5 %; p = 0.004). One hundred forty patients (84.3 %) were treated with aggressive resection (anastomosis 57.8 % and stoma 26.5 %). Overall and major morbidity, mortality and incidence of reoperation in the RRT and RS + RT groups did not differ significantly (63 % vs 64.2 % [p = 1.000], 21.7 % vs 11.7 % [p = 0.137], 6.5 % vs 0.8 % [p = 0.065] and 6.5 % vs 3.3 % [p = 0.360], respectively). However, incidence of permanent stoma and mortality during follow-up was higher in the RRT group than in the RS + RT group (44.2 % vs 12.6 % [p = 0.000] and 16.3 % vs 3.4 % [p = 0.004], respectively). In multivariate analysis, preoperative anaemia was significantly associated with overall morbidity (p = 0.015), while severe intra-abdominal adhesion (p = 0.017), ASA grades III–V (P = 0.022), and RTOG grade IV morbidity (P = 0.018) were predicators of major morbidity. CONCLUSIONS: Radiation-induced late morbidity tended to be severe in the RRT group with more patients suffering RTOG/EORTC grade IV morbidity, while there were no significant differences in postoperative morbidity, mortality and reoperation. Aggressive resection was feasible with acceptable postoperative outcomes. Severe intra-abdominal adhesion, ASA grades III–V and RTOG/EORTC grade IV late morbidity contributed significantly to major postoperative morbidity.
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spelling pubmed-44621172015-06-11 Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy Yang, Jianbo Ding, Chao Zhang, Tenghui Zhang, Liang Lv, Tengfei Ge, Xiaolong Gong, Jianfeng Zhu, Weiming Li, Ning Li, Jieshou Radiat Oncol Research BACKGROUND: Radical hysterectomy and radiotherapy have long been mainstays of cervical cancer treatment. Early stage cervical cancer (FIGO stage IB1–IIA) is traditionally treated using radical surgery combined with radiotherapy, while locally advanced cervical cancer is treated using radiotherapy alone or chemoradiotherapy. In this retrospective study, we describe and analyse the presenting clinical features and outcomes in our cohort and evaluate possible risk factors for postoperative morbidity in women who underwent surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy (CRE). METHODS: One hundred sixty-six eligible cervical cancer patients who underwent surgery for CRE were retrospectively identified between September 2003 and July 2014 in a prospectively maintained database. Among them, 46 patients received radical radiotherapy (RRT) and 120 received radical surgery plus radiotherapy (RS + RT). Clinical features, postoperative morbidity and mortality, and risk factors for postoperative morbidity were analysed. RESULTS: RS + RT group patients were more likely to present with RTOG/EORTC grade III late morbidity (76.1 % vs 92.5 %; p = 0.004), while RRT group patients tended to show RTOG/EORTC grade IV late morbidity (23.9 % vs 7.5 %; p = 0.004). One hundred forty patients (84.3 %) were treated with aggressive resection (anastomosis 57.8 % and stoma 26.5 %). Overall and major morbidity, mortality and incidence of reoperation in the RRT and RS + RT groups did not differ significantly (63 % vs 64.2 % [p = 1.000], 21.7 % vs 11.7 % [p = 0.137], 6.5 % vs 0.8 % [p = 0.065] and 6.5 % vs 3.3 % [p = 0.360], respectively). However, incidence of permanent stoma and mortality during follow-up was higher in the RRT group than in the RS + RT group (44.2 % vs 12.6 % [p = 0.000] and 16.3 % vs 3.4 % [p = 0.004], respectively). In multivariate analysis, preoperative anaemia was significantly associated with overall morbidity (p = 0.015), while severe intra-abdominal adhesion (p = 0.017), ASA grades III–V (P = 0.022), and RTOG grade IV morbidity (P = 0.018) were predicators of major morbidity. CONCLUSIONS: Radiation-induced late morbidity tended to be severe in the RRT group with more patients suffering RTOG/EORTC grade IV morbidity, while there were no significant differences in postoperative morbidity, mortality and reoperation. Aggressive resection was feasible with acceptable postoperative outcomes. Severe intra-abdominal adhesion, ASA grades III–V and RTOG/EORTC grade IV late morbidity contributed significantly to major postoperative morbidity. BioMed Central 2015-06-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4462117/ /pubmed/26047616 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13014-015-0433-5 Text en © Yang et al. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Yang, Jianbo
Ding, Chao
Zhang, Tenghui
Zhang, Liang
Lv, Tengfei
Ge, Xiaolong
Gong, Jianfeng
Zhu, Weiming
Li, Ning
Li, Jieshou
Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title_full Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title_fullStr Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title_full_unstemmed Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title_short Clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
title_sort clinical features, outcome and risk factors in cervical cancer patients after surgery for chronic radiation enteropathy
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4462117/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13014-015-0433-5
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