AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to evaluate the characteristics of hysterectomy specimens and assess the role of preoperative CA-125 levels and imaging in endometrial cancer patients, ultimately creating a risk matrix for identifying those needing lymphadenectomy.
  • A review of 405 patients revealed specific factors—like myometrial infiltration, lymphovascular space involvement, and CA-125 levels—that were used to predict lymph node metastasis, with a developed risk matrix indicating a significant difference in risk based on the presence of these factors.
  • The findings suggest that patients without deep invasion or vascular involvement, along with normal CA-125 and imaging results, have a low risk of lymph node involvement, which could help guide decisions on whether to proceed with lymphadenectomy.

Article Abstract

Objectives:: To evaluate the postoperative pathological characteristics of hysterectomy specimens, preoperative cancer antigen (CA)-125 levels and imaging modalities in patients with endometrial cancer and to build a risk matrix model to identify and recruit patients for retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy.

Methods:: A total of 405 patients undergoing surgical treatment for endometrial cancer were retrospectively reviewed and analyzed. Clinical (age and body mass index), laboratory (CA-125), radiological (lymph node evaluation), and pathological (tumour size, grade, lymphovascular space invasion, lymph node metastasis, and myometrial invasion) parameters were used to test the ability to predict lymph node metastasis. Four parameters were selected by logistic regression to create a risk matrix for nodal metastasis.

Results:: Of the 405 patients, 236 (58.3%) underwent complete pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy, 96 (23.7%) underwent nodal sampling, and 73 (18%) had no surgical lymph node assessment. The parameters predicting nodal involvement obtained through logistic regression were myometrial infiltration >50%, lymphovascular space involvement, pelvic lymph node involvement by imaging, and a CA-125 value >21.5 U/mL. According to our risk matrix, the absence of these four parameters implied a risk of lymph node metastasis of 2.7%, whereas in the presence of all four parameters the risk was 82.3%.

Conclusion:: Patients without deep myometrial invasion and lymphovascular space involvement on the final pathological examination and with normal CA-125 values and lymph node radiological examinations have a relatively low risk of lymph node involvement. This risk assessment matrix may be able to refer patients with high-risk parameters necessitating lymphadenectomy and to decide the risks and benefits of lymphadenectomy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5251192PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2017(01)06DOI Listing

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