Abstract

Objective: The object of this study was to assess the outcomes of surgical treatment of stage pT1a and pT1b1 cervical cancer.Method: The medical records of 59 patients at our institution with pT1a and pT1b1 cervical cancer who underwent an operation as their primary treatment between January 1996 and September 2006 were analyzed retrospectively.Results: Ten patients underwent an operation which was less aggressive than the current operative modality at our institution. Three patients had recurrence. No patients had recurrence resulting from insufficient operations. No patients had any histologic subtype of adnexal metastasis in the resected specimens. Two of the five patients with squamous cell carcinoma and lymph node metastases at the initial operation had recurrence. Only one patient had a histologic subtype of adenosquamous carcinoma. The patient with adenosquamous carcinoma had recurrence.Conclusion: The results suggest that the surgical procedure did not affect prognosis in the cases we analyzed by surgical modalities. The current evidence suggests that a patient in an early stage can undergo less aggressive surgery than the current operative modality requires.

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