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Poster Display session

17P - Impact of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy on survival outcome compared to other treatment modalities for cervical cancer stage IIIc

Date

23 Feb 2023

Session

Poster Display session

Presenters

Asmaa Ellaithy

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2023) 8 (1suppl_1): 100863-100863. 10.1016/esmoop/esmoop100863

Authors

A. Ellaithy

Author affiliations

  • Suez Canal University Hospital, Ismailia/EG

Resources

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Abstract 17P

Background

Cervical cancer is very common among females. Surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy are different treatment options for cervical cancer. In 2018, the FIGO staging system has implemented lymph node status in the staging criteria but didn’t consider the number of positive lymph nodes. The current guidelines recommends primary chemoradiotherapy to treat the advanced stages but combined treatment regimens for node positive cervical cancer remains controversial, so this study aims to evaluate the survival outcome of different treatment modalities with further stratification by the positive lymph node number.

Methods

We used Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database to extract the data of 3146 patients with node positive cervical cancer diagnosed from 2000 to 2018, they were treated with different approaches: adjuvant chemoradiotherapy, adjuvant radiotherapy, surgery without systemic treatment, adjuvant chemotherapy and primary chemoradiotherapy. We divided patients into four groups according to the number of involved lymph nodes: one node, two to three nodes, four to 10 nodes, more than 10 nodes. We used SPSS for data analysis.

Results

The overall 5-year survival outcome was higher for adjuvant chemoradiotherapy compared to adjuvant radiotherapy, surgery, primary chemoradiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy (68.7%, 63.4%, 59.1%, 47.5%, 40.7% ; P-value >0.00). Out of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy showed better 5-year overall survival outcome in patients with one lymph node involvement 73.1% and in patients with 2-3 positive lymph nodes 63.9%.

Conclusions

These results highlighted adjuvant chemo-radiotherapy as the treatment of choice for node cervical cancer stage IIIc, surgery and adjuvant chemoradiotherapy has have qiuet similar survival outcome. We also recommend the number of positive lymph nodes to be implemented in the upcoming FIGO system as a predictor for survival outcome and a factor for the treatment plan. Further evaluation is necessary to weigh the benefit versus side effects of the best regimen for each patient.

Legal entity responsible for the study

The author.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

The author has declared no conflicts of interest.

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