Abstract

Objective To investigate the efficacy of different treatment modalities used in microinvasive adenocarcinoma (AC) of the uterine cervix (FIGO stage IA1 and IA2), and review the literature. Methods Medical and histopathological records of 38 patients treated for microinvasive AC of the cervix were studied retrospectively, and compared with the literature. Results Twenty-nine patients had stage IA1 and nine stage IA2 cancers. Treatment modalities ranged from radical hysterectomy with pelvic lymph node dissection (PLND) to conization only. Eighteen patients underwent a conization, including two patients with stage IA2 disease, of whom 11 had 18 pregnancies in total, resulting in 13 live births, two terminations and three spontaneous abortions. In two patients a hysterectomy was performed after pregnancy. No recurrences were noted during an average follow-up of 72 months. In the literature 1565 patients were reported. Of the 814 patients undergoing PLND, 12 had positive nodes. Lymphvascular space invasion (LVSI) was present in 25 patients, all without node involvement. None of the 356 described parametria were involved. Twenty-nine recurrences occurred. In total, 21 pregnancies with 16 live births occurred in those patients treated to preserve fertility. Conclusions There is no uniformity in the treatment of microinvasive AC of the uterine cervix. For stage IA1 disease, conization seems to be safe and PLND is only recommended where LVSI is present. Although the number of reported cases is small, for stage IA2 disease, conization with PLND in case of LVSI seems advisable. More studies are desirable to define the optimal treatment for patients with microinvasive AC of the cervix, especially with regard to those patients with stage IA2 disease.

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