Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate whether systematic lymph node dissection can confer clinical benefits in patients with apparent early-stage low-grade epithelial ovarian cancer.MethodsPatients with apparent early-stage low-grade epithelial ovarian cancer seen at Peking Union Medical College Hospital from January 1, 2005, to December 31, 2015, were retrospectively enrolled. Patients with other histological types and those who did not receive necessary adjuvant chemotherapy were excluded. Data collection and long-term follow-up were performed. According to the removed lymph node number, three groups based on surgical methods were used: abnormal lymph node resection, pelvic lymphadenectomy, and systematic lymph node dissection to control surgical quality. Their effects on prognosis were analyzed in pathological subgroups.ResultsA total of 196 patients were enrolled; 30.1% of patients had serous, 42.3% of patients had mucinous, and 27.6% of patients had endometrioid carcinoma, of which 51 (26.0%), 96 (49.0), and 49 (25.0%) patients were treated with the above surgical methods, respectively. The occult lymph node metastasis rate was 14 (7.1%), and only five (2.6%) of apparent early-stage patients were upstaged due to lymph node metastasis alone. Systematic lymph node dissection did not benefit progression-free survival or disease-specific overall survival of apparent early-stage low-grade mucinous and endometrioid epithelial ovarian cancer but prolonged progression-free survival of apparent early-stage low-grade serous patients (OR, 0.231, 95% CI, 0.080, 0.668, p = 0.007).ConclusionsSystematic lymph node dissection may be abolished in patients with apparent early-stage low-grade mucinous and endometrioid epithelial ovarian cancer but may be considered for apparent early-stage low-grade serous patients.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer is the most lethal tumor of all gynecological malignancies, approximately 90% of which are epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) [1]

  • This study aims to determine the lymph nodes (LNs) metastatic patterns of apparent early-stage low-grade EOC (LGEOC) patients, including patients with lowgrade serous ovarian cancer (LG-SOC), low-grade mucinous ovarian cancer (LG-MOC), and low-grade endometrioid ovarian cancer (LGEOC), and to explore the survival benefit of Systematic lymph node dissection (SLND) on them

  • One hundred ninety-six patients were eventually included in the study (Figure 1), of which 59 (30.1%) had LGSOC, 83 (42.3%) had LG-MOC, and 54 (27.6%) had LG-EOC

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Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer is the most lethal tumor of all gynecological malignancies, approximately 90% of which are epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) [1]. Complete staging surgery and necessary adjuvant chemotherapy are the standard treatments for EOC patients according to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines [2]. In early-stage EOC, SLND helps doctors acquire a sufficient number of lymph nodes (LNs) to identify occult LN metastases and guide adjuvant chemotherapy decisions by accurate staging [4, 5]. The low LN metastatic rate and upstaging rate in apparent early-stage low-grade EOC (LGEOC) reported in few studies challenge the necessity of SLND [6, 7]. Those studies had intrinsic limitations: uncontrolled surgery quality, nonparallel prognostic factors, and partially missing clinical and prognostic data. Low incidence increases the difficulty of studying LGEOC, but its unique features compared with highgrade EOC (HGEOC) have increased the urgency and necessity of studying its clinical characteristics and establishing an individualized treatment [8,9,10,11]

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