Abstract

Currently, the standard radiation field for locally advanced cervical cancer patients without evidence of para-aortic lymph node (PALN) metastasis is the pelvis. Due to the low accuracy of imaging in the diagnosis of PALN metastasis and the high incidence of PALN failure after pelvic radiotherapy, prophylactic pelvic and para-aortic irradiation, also called extended-field irradiation (EFI), is performed for patients with cervical cancer. In the era of concurrent chemoradiotherapy, randomized controlled trials are limited, and whether patients with cervical cancer can benefit from prophylactic EFI is still controversial. With conformal or intensity-modulated radiation therapy, patients tolerate prophylactic EFI very well. The severe toxicities of prophylactic EFI are not significantly higher than those of pelvic radiotherapy. We recommend delivering prophylactic EFI to cervical cancer patients with common iliac lymph nodes metastasis. Clinical trials are needed to investigate whether patients with ≥3 positive pelvic lymph nodes and FIGO stage IIIB disease can benefit from prophylactic EFI. According to the distribution of PALNs, it is reasonable to use the renal vein as the upper border of the radiation therapy field for patients treated with prophylactic EFI. The clinical target volume expansion of the node from the vessel should be smaller in the right para-caval region than in the left lateral para-aortic region. The right para-caval region above L2 or L3 may be omitted from the PALN target volume to reduce the dose to the duodenum. More clinical trials on prophylactic EFI in cervical cancer are needed.

Highlights

  • Cervical cancer is a major health problem for women in developing countries

  • We find that a large primary tumor, advanced FIGO stage, pelvic lymph nodes (LNs) metastasis, bilateral pelvic LN metastasis, common iliac LN metastasis, non-squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and high SCC antigen levels are risk factors for Para-aortic lymph node (PALN) metastasis before treatment or PALN recurrence and distant failure after treatment

  • Clinical trials are needed to investigate whether patients with ≥3 positive pelvic LNs, and FIGO stage IIIB disease can benefit from prophylactic extended-field irradiation (EFI)

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Summary

Frontiers in Oncology

The standard radiation field for locally advanced cervical cancer patients without evidence of para-aortic lymph node (PALN) metastasis is the pelvis. Due to the low accuracy of imaging in the diagnosis of PALN metastasis and the high incidence of PALN failure after pelvic radiotherapy, prophylactic pelvic and para-aortic irradiation, called extended-field irradiation (EFI), is performed for patients with cervical cancer. We recommend delivering prophylactic EFI to cervical cancer patients with common iliac lymph nodes metastasis. Clinical trials are needed to investigate whether patients with ≥3 positive pelvic lymph nodes and FIGO stage IIIB disease can benefit from prophylactic EFI. According to the distribution of PALNs, it is reasonable to use the renal vein as the upper border of the radiation therapy field for patients treated with prophylactic EFI.

INTRODUCTION
Prophylactic EFI in Cervical Cancer
PROPHYLACTIC EFI WITHOUT CONCURRENT CHEMOTHERAPY
PROPHYLACTIC EFI COMBINED WITH CONCURRENT CHEMOTHERAPY
THE TOXICITIES OF EFI
THE INDICATIONS OF PROPHYLACTIC EFI
DELINEATION AND DOSE PRESCRIPTION OF THE PALN REGION
Inferior third
SURGICAL STAGING OF PALN REGION
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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