Abstract

We performed a retrospective analysis of the clinical features and patient outcomes for advanced-stage glassy cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix. The study was restricted to cases in which the glassy cell features constituted at least 95% of the biopsied specimen. During the study period, 675 patients were diagnosed with primary cervical carcinoma. Five (0.7%) of the 675 patients had cervical glassy cell carcinoma; of these, three were premenopausal, and two were postmenopausal. Abnormal vaginal bleeding was the most frequent presenting symptom. Glassy cell carcinoma presented as a fungating, exophytic, or infiltrative mass. The greatest tumor dimension ranged from 3 to 9 cm. All patients had parametrial extension. Four patients had stage IIB tumors, and one had a stage IIIB tumor. All patients received concurrent chemoradiation therapy. The patient with a stage IIIB tumor died of hypovolemic shock caused by upper gastrointestinal bleeding during radiation therapy. Three patients with stage IIB tumors survived for more than 8 years without tumor recurrence or metastasis. One of these three patients died of pelvic recurrence 10 years after the initial diagnosis. Cervical glassy cell carcinoma has traditionally been considered an aggressive, highly malignant tumor with poor prognosis, but our data suggest that patient survival is not significantly decreased compared with other histological types of cervical carcinoma. It will be necessary to analyze patient outcomes using a larger number of cervical glassy cell carcinoma cases to confirm our findings.

Highlights

  • Glassy cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix, accounting for approximately 1‒2% of all cervical carcinomas, is a very rare form of cervical carcinoma [1,2,3]

  • Our results show that advanced-stage cervical glassy cell carcinoma responds well to concurrent chemoradiation therapy and that the overall survival rate of the patients is different from that reported previously, supporting the notion that glassy cell carcinoma patient survival is not significantly decreased compared with other histological types of cervical carcinoma

  • A histopathological examination of a punch biopsy established a final diagnosis of glassy cell carcinoma

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Summary

Introduction

Glassy cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix, accounting for approximately 1‒2% of all cervical carcinomas, is a very rare form of cervical carcinoma [1,2,3]. In 1956, Cherry and Glucksmann [5] first described cervical glassy cell carcinoma as a specific and distinctive entity of cervical carcinoma and classified this tumor as the most poorly differentiated adenosquamous carcinoma. They suggested sharp cytoplasmic margins; ground glass-appearing eosinophilic cytoplasm; and large, round to ovoid nuclei with prominent nucleoli as the morphological criteria for the diagnosis of glassy cell carcinoma. According to two reports [2, 5], glassy cell features were defined based on the three main histopathological criteria: (1) cells with a moderate amount of ground-glass or finely granular cytoplasm that stains faintly blue with hematoxylin and eosin, (2) distinct cytoplasmic borders that stain with eosin and periodic acid-Schiff, and (3) large nuclei with conspicuous nucleoli. Due to its rarity, there have been no large cohort studies or clinical trials to clarify the outcomes of patients with this tumor or develop standard treatment strategies

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