Abstract

The surgical treatment of invasive cervical cancer must both remove the primary tumour and eliminate the paths by which it spreads--i.e., the lymphatics and the lymph nodes. In 359 patients, systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy yielded positive nodes in 30.3% of Stage Ib and in 44.7% of Stage IIb cases. In the 140 patients with positive nodes, the obturator group was involved in 76.4%, the external iliac group in 62.8%, and the presacral and subaortic nodes in only 4.3%. One node group was involved in 55% of the patients, two and three groups in 27.8% and 7.1% respectively. In patients with only one positive node group, the obturator nodes were involved the most often (31.4%), followed by the external iliac (21.4%) and parametrial nodes (9.2%). Nine patients with Stage Ib and 31 patients with Stage IIb disease underwent para-aortic as well as pelvic lymphadenectomy. Positive para-aortic nodes were found in 11.1% and 22.6%, respectively; 12.5% of these patients had major complications, but there was no surgical mortality. Since radiotherapy cannot sterilize positive nodes, systematic pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy may improve the survival of such patients.

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