Patients with persistent or recurrent cervical cancer, following primary treatment with concurrent chemoradiation, represent a subgroup eligible for pelvic exenteration. In light of the substantial morbidity associated with open pelvic exenterations, minimally invasive surgical techniques have been introduced. This systematic review aims to analyze and discuss the current literature on robotic-assisted pelvic exenterations in cervical cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe only randomized trial (LACC trial, Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer), published in 2018, comparing the oncologic outcomes of minimally invasive and open surgery in early-stage cervical cancer, has shown inferior disease-free and overall survival for minimally invasive surgery. Subsequent large retrospective cohort studies of centers with long-standing experience in minimally invasive surgery and large nationwide cohort studies have shown that both the laparoscopic and robotic approaches have similar survival outcomes as the open surgery group in the LACC trial. Important protective measures to avoid tumor spillage in the peritoneal cavity during colpotomy were the closure of the vaginal cuff and avoiding the use of a uterine manipulator.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe application of indocyanine green (ICG) has recently been reported to aid in the resection of endometriosis in the bladder wall and/or involving the ureters. A symptomatic 41-year-old patient with dysmenorrhea and pollakisuria was referred to our tertiary center. Imaging revealed a 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBest Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol
August 2023
The concept of pelvic sentinel lymph node mapping has been well-investigated in endometrial and cervical cancer. A variety of tracers have been used including blue dye, technetium-99-m (Tc-99 m), and fluorescent tracer indocyanine green. Pelvic sentinel lymph node mapping has shown its safety, efficacy, and diagnostic accuracy, with high sensitivity and negative predictive value of more than 90%, in retrospective cohort studies as well as in prospective trials for robotic surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeiomyosarcomas of the uterine cervix are rare, mostly occurring in perimenopausal women. Diagnosis is based on pathology and immunohistochemistry. Surgery with a total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy remains the standard.
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