Abstract

Small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the cervix (SCNEC) is a rare disease characterized by a higher incidence of lymphatic invasion, metastasis, and recurrence compared to the squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma subtypes. Furthermore, it is prone to early distant metastasis and has a poor prognosis. Chemotherapy has an important role in the management of cervical SCNEC. The effective treatment schemes for early-stage SCNEC are local treatment with radical surgery and systemic chemotherapy. However no standard treatment regimen exists because of a rare disease. We reviewed previous reports to determine whether etoposide/platinum, which is used for histopathologically similar small cell carcinoma of the lung, is an appropriate initial chemotherapy regimen for SCNEC of the cervix. In this review the Cochrane library sources, ClinicalTrials.gov, Web of Silence, PubMed and search engine of Google scholar were searched for all interventional studies, reviews, case reports and meta-analyses published in 1997-2021. Etoposide/platinum (EP) is the most commonly used regimen and paclitaxel/carboplatin is the second most common, used as a part of multimodality therapy for SCNEC of the cervix in most studies. Cisplatin/vincristine/bleomycin, cisplatin/irinotecan, cisplatin/ifosfamide/etoposide were also reported in concurrence with EP; however no clinical trials are dedicated to SCNEC. Etoposide and platinum tend to have a better prognosis compared to other regimens used for other subtypes of cervical cancer. For recurrent cervical SCNEC, treatment options for patients are very limited. The application of molecular testing for targeted mutations may suggest potential future therapies that may be useful in this disease.

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