Study Objective: To compare perioperative and long-term outcomes related to laparoscopic and open abdominal surgical management of cervical cancer.

Design: Propensity-matched comparison of prospectively collected data (Canadian Task Force classification II-1).

Setting: University teaching hospital.

Patients: Sixty-five propensity-matched patient pairs (130 patients) undergoing either laparoscopy or open abdominal surgical procedures to treat cervical cancer.

Intervention: Radical hysterectomy plus lymphadenectomy was performed via the laparoscopic (LRH) or open abdominal approach (RAH).

Measurement And Main Results: Baseline characteristics of the study populations were similar. In the LRH group the procedure was converted to open surgery in 2 patients (2%). Compared with the RAH group, patients undergoing LRH experienced less blood loss (200 vs 500 mL; p < .001), a lower transfusion rate (6% vs 22%; p = .02), similar operative time (245 vs 259.5 minutes; p = .26), and shorter length of hospital stay (4 vs 8 days; p < .001). No between-group differences in intraoperative complications were recorded (p = 1.0); however, a trend toward a lower postoperative complication rate (Accordion system grade ≥ 3) was observed for LRH compared with RAH (4 patients [6%]) vs 12 patients [18%]; p = .06). Five-year disease-free survival (p = .6, log-rank test) and overall survival (p = .31, log-rank test) did not differ statistically between women undergoing LRH or RAH.

Conclusion: Laparoscopy ensures the same results as open surgery insofar as radicality and long-term survival. Use of the laparoscopic approach is associated with improved short-term results, minimizing the occurrence of severe postoperative complications.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmig.2014.03.018DOI Listing

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