Abstract
From 1969 to 1981 thirty-six patients with stage IB and IIA cervical carcinoma were identified at pretherapy surgical staging laparotomy with histologically documented metastatic disease to the periaortic lymph nodes. All patients underwent a periaortic node dissection and all patients completed a course of extendedfield radiotherapy in a postoperative setting. No major radiotherapeutic complications were encountered. The 5-year actuarial survival rate was 50%, with a median survival time of 29 months. The median time to recurrence was 10 months, while the median duration of survival following a recurrence was 7 months. Seventy-five percent of all recurrences occurred at distant sites. These data demonstrate that survival may be favorably influenced by employing extended-field radiotherapy in those patients with early-clinical-stage cervical cancer and periaortic nodal metastases. The subsequent development of distant metastases after such a treatment regimen emphasizes the need for adjuvant cytotoxic chemotherapy to enhance overall survival.
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