Abstract

BackgroundRadical radiotherapy is the standard treatment for patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma (FIGO stage IB2–IVA). Worldwide, incidence and mortality rates vary among regions because of differences in lifestyles and treatment standards. Herein, we evaluated the outcomes of radical radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma from the middle Black Sea region of Turkey.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed the records of 64 consecutive patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma who were treated from January 2013 to 2016 in our radiation oncology department. All patients staging and radiotherapy planning were performed with modern imaging techniques including magnetic resonance imaging and positron-emission-tomography/computed tomography before radical radiotherapy. Thereafter, all of them were treated with external beam radiotherapy and concurrent cis-platinum-based chemotherapy followed by three-dimensional intra-cavitary high-dose-rate brachytherapy.ResultsThe median age at diagnosis was 54.5 years. The median follow-up period was 21 months. Acute grade 3 toxicity was detected in 3.1% of patients. Late toxicity was not detected in any patient. The 1- and 3-year progression-free survival rates were 83.6 and 67.5%, respectively. The 1- and 3-year overall survival rates were 95.7 and 76.9%, respectively. The most important prognostic factor was the FIGO stage. Distant metastasis was the most common cause of death in patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma despite radical radiotherapy.ConclusionsIn patients with locally-advanced cervix uteri carcinoma from the middle Black Sea region of our developing country, acceptable toxicity and survival rates are achieved similar to the recent literature from developed countries with using of modern staging, planning and radical radiotherapy techniques. However, recurrence was mostly in the form of distant metastases and further investigations on systemic therapies are required.

Highlights

  • Radical radiotherapy is the standard treatment for patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma (FIGO stage IB2–IVA)

  • The datasets were transferred to a treatment planning system (TPS; Eclipse 8.6 for External beam radiotherapy (EBRT) and 10.0 for HDRBRA; Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA, USA) via a digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM) network

  • Patient clinical characteristics All 64 patients were from the Black Sea region of Turkey

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Radical radiotherapy is the standard treatment for patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma (FIGO stage IB2–IVA). We evaluated the outcomes of radical radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced cervix uteri carcinoma from the middle Black Sea region of Turkey. Cervix uteri carcinoma is the most common gynecological cancer worldwide. It is the fourth most common malignancy and the fourth leading cause of cancerrelated death in women. In Turkey, cervix uteri carcinoma is the third most common gynecological cancer, after corpus uteri and ovarian carcinoma. It is the ninth most common malignancy in women [3]. External beam radiotherapy (EBRT) with concurrent platinum-based chemotherapy (CHT) followed by brachytherapy (BRA), known as radical radiotherapy

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call