癌症宫颈减肥治疗:平衡肿瘤结果与生殖成功。

Gynecologic oncology research and practice Pub Date : 2016-10-21 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s40661-016-0030-9
Karla Willows, Genevieve Lennox, Allan Covens
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引用次数: 69

摘要

背景:癌症是世界范围内女性中第四常见的癌症,其中许多人仍处于生育期。在发达国家,筛查和治疗的进展已将早期疾病的5年生存率提高到90%以上。现在的重点正在转移到降低癌症患者的发病率和改善生育结果上。经淋巴结评估的根治性气管切开术成为选定病变妇女的标准护理结果:现有文献表明,根治性气管切除术后的粗复发率和死亡率为结论:今天,许多癌症幸存者成功怀孕。对于那些患有早期疾病的患者,微创和保留生育能力的技术在不影响肿瘤学安全性的情况下改善了产科结果。三项正在进行的低风险肿瘤非根治性手术试验的结果
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Fertility-sparing management in cervical cancer: balancing oncologic outcomes with reproductive success.

Background: Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide, many of who are still within their reproductive lifespan. Advances in screening and treatment have increased the 5-year survival for early stage disease to over 90 % in developed countries. The focus is now shifting to reducing morbidity and improving fertility outcomes for cervical cancer patients. Radical trachelectomy with lymph node assessment became the standard of care for selected women with lesions <2 cm who desire fertility preservation. However, several questions still remain regarding the degree of surgical radicality required for tumors <2 cm, and fertility-sparing options for women with early-stage disesase ≥2 cm, and those with more advanced disease. Here, we compile a narrative review of the evidence for oncologic and pregnancy outcomes following radical trachelectomy, non-radical fertility-sparing surgery, and the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery for larger lesions. We also review the literature for assisted reproductive technologies in women with more advanced disease.

Findings: Available literature suggests that the crude recurrence and mortality rates after radical trachelectomy are <5 and <2 %, respectively (approx. 11 and 4 % for tumors ≥ 2 cm). Among 1238 patients who underwent fertility-sparing surgery for early cervical cancer there were 469 pregnancies with a 67 % live birth rate. Among 134 cases with lesions ≥ 2 cm, there were ten conceptions with a live birth rate of 70 %. Outcomes after non-radical surgery (simple trachelectomy or cervical conization) are similar, although only applicable among a highly selected patient population. For patients ineligible for fertility-preserving surgery or who require adjuvant radiation therapy, current options include ovarian transposition and cryopreservation of oocytes or embryos but other techniques are under investigation.

Conclusion: Today, many cervical cancer survivors have successful pregnancies. For those with early-stage disease, minimally invasive and fertility sparing techniques have resulted in improved obstetrical outcomes without compromising oncologic safety. Results from three ongoing trials on non-radical surgery for low-risk tumors <2 cm will further inform the need for radical surgery in such patients. For those in whom natural childbearing is unachievable, advances in assisted reproductive technologies provide reproductive options. Despite our advances, the effects of cervical cancer survivorship on quality of life are not fully elucidated.

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