Abstract

Relevance: Treating vaginal recurrence of gynecological cancer remains a complex clinical problem. Surgery is an effective and relatively safe strategy for these cases. Vaginectomy is a method of surgical treatment of gynecological cancer local recurrence. Although vaginectomy is considered an effective treatment for a vaginal recurrence of cervical, ovarian, or endometrial cancers, only a few published
 reports of vaginal resections have been found. In most cases, vaginal resections were performed by vaginal and/or/or open access. Several
 reports on laparoscopic vaginal resection for recurrence in gynecological cancer were found.
 The aim was to study the effectiveness of vaginectomy in recurrent gynecological cancer.
 Methods: Clinical cases of seven patients after vaginectomy were analyzed.
 Results: The patients were 42 to 62 years (median – 53 years). The duration of the operation varied from 240 to 480 minutes
 (median – 317 min), the volume of blood loss was from 90 to 220 ml (median 140 ml), and resection margins were negative in all
 cases. A ureteral catheter was installed in 2 cases. The Foley catheter was removed after ten days on average (1-11 days). The
 patients stayed in the hospital for 7-14 days (median – 7 days). No intraoperative complications were registered. All patients after
 vaginectomy are alive.
 Conclusion: Vaginal recurrence is the most common local recurrence in gynecological cancer, and there is no consensus regarding
 its treatment tactics. Although this article is somewhat limited in the number of patients, our results show the efficacy of vaginectomy in
 recurrent vaginal gynecological cancer

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