Objective Cervical cancer is the most common solid cancer diagnosed in pregnancy. Platinum is an active drug in the treatment of patients with cervical cancer. In the second and third trimesters, ...platinum is used to prevent cancer progression until fetal maturity is reached. However, knowledge about the transplacental passage of platinum is very limited. Study Design Between May 2008 and June 2014, platinum-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy was applied to 21 consecutive patients with cervical cancer diagnosed in their second trimester. At the time of delivery by cesarean delivery, synchronous samples from maternal blood, umbilical cord blood, and amniotic fluid were taken and analyzed for platinum concentrations. Results The mean week of gestation at cancer diagnosis was 17 (13–23). On average 3 (range, 2–4) cycles of chemotherapy were applied. Cesarean deliveries were carried out between 30.4 and 36.5 weeks of gestation. Twenty-two healthy babies without renal, hepatic, auditory, or hematopoietic impairment were delivered. Platinum concentrations in umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid were 23–65% and 11–42% of the maternal blood, respectively. Conclusion This series on in vivo measurement of platinum concentrations in the fetomaternal compartment observed that because of consistently lower platinum values in the fetoplacental unit, a placental filtration mechanism of platinum may be assumed.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK
Objective The International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) staging for cervical cancer is based on clinical examination. Previous studies have demonstrated significant upstaging with ...surgical staging. However, no randomized trial has ever shown a survival benefit when radiation combined with chemoradiation (RCTX) is modified according to surgical staging. The objective of the study was to evaluate the feasibility and outcomes of surgical staging prior to radical RCTX treatment among patients with locally advanced cervical cancer in the setting of a larger, prospective, randomized study (the Uterus-11 study of the German Gynecologic Oncology Group). Study Design Between 2009 and 2013, 255 patients with advanced cervical cancer (FIGO IIB-IVA) were randomized to surgical staging and RCTX (arm A) or RCTX (arm B). RCTX in both arms included pelvic external beam radiotherapy with weekly cisplatin at 40 mg/m2 and brachytherapy. Extended-field radiation was performed in cases of confirmed paraaortic metastases. Results One hundred thirty patients were randomized to surgical staging; 121 were eligible for this analysis. The mean patient age was 47.2 years, and the mean body mass index was 26.2 kg/m2 ; the FIGO stages were IIB, IIIA, IIIB, and IVA in 85 (70.2%), 4 (3.3%), 29 (24%), and 3 (2.5%) patients, respectively. Arm A and arm B were similar with respect to Karnofsky performance status, histology, comorbidities, and lymphovascular space involvement. The surgical approach was transperitoneal laparoscopy in nearly all patients (93.4%), with no operative mortality. One patient (0.8%) had a conversion to laparotomy; 2 patients had more than 500 mL blood loss; the early postoperative complication rate was 7.3%. A mean of 19 pelvic and 17 paraaortic nodes were removed, with means of 2.4 and 1.3 positive nodes, respectively. RCTX began between 7 and 21 days after surgery. Operative staging led to upstaging in 40 of 121 (33%). Conclusion Surgical staging in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer is safe and does not delay primary RCTX in a randomized study.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK
Colpohysterectomy is sometimes associated with a large upper colpectomy resulting in a shortened vagina, potentially impacting sexual function. We report on a preliminary experience of a laparoscopic ...colpoplasty to restore a normal vaginal length. Patients with shortened vaginas after a laparoscopic colpohysterectomy were considered for a laparoscopic modified Davydov's procedure to create a new vaginal vault using the peritoneum of the rectum and bladder. From 2010 to 2014, 8 patients were offered this procedure, after informed preoperative consent. Indications were 2 extensive recurrent vaginal intraepithelial neoplasias grade 3 and 6 radical hysterectomies for cervical cancer. Mean vaginal length before surgery was 3.8 cm (standard deviation, 1.6). Median operative time was 50 minutes (range, 45-90). Blood loss was minimal (50-100 mL). No perioperative complications occurred. Median vaginal length at discharge was 11.3 cm (range, 9-13). Sexual intercourse could be resumed around 10 weeks after surgery. At a median follow-up of 33.8 months (range, 2.4-51.3), 6 patients remained sexually active but 2 had stopped. Although this experience is small, this laparoscopic modified Davydov's procedure seems to be an effective procedure, adaptable to each patient's anatomy. If the initial postoperative regular self-dilatation is carefully observed, vaginal patency is durably restored and enables normal sexual function.
Pelvic ± para-aortic lymphadenectomy (LAE) is an essential element of staging and treatment of different gynecologic malignancies. However, LAE can induce asymptomatic and symptomatic pelvic ...lymphoceles (LCs) in a considerable percentage of patients. Therapy of symptomatic LCs may cause additional morbidity. The best strategy to reduce the rate of LCs has not established yet.
Between January 2011 and May 2012, transperitoneal laparoscopic pelvic ± para-aortic LAE was performed at the Department of Gynecology at Charité University Hospital Berlin in 238 patients with cervical, endometrial, ovarian, or groin-positive vulvar cancer. The application of FloSeal (Baxter, Deerfield, IL) and CoSeal (Baxter) was used in 25 patients (group A) as an alternative to routine pelvic drainage after LAE. A case-control comparison was performed on 25 patients (group B) with bilateral drainage after complete LAE. The primary objective of this pilot study was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of the method. As a secondary objective, we evaluated the incidence of LCs and symptomatic LCs in both groups. The detection of LCs was performed during oncologic follow-up by sonography, computed tomographic imaging, or magnetic resonance imaging.
Pelvic (n = 50) or pelvic + para-aortic (n = 42) LAE was performed in 44 patients with cervical, 2 with endometrial, 1 with ovarian, and 2 with groin-positive vulvar cancer, respectively. In group B (n = 25), systematic bilateral pelvic drainage was placed after finishing LAE, whereas in group A (n = 25) LAE areas were sealed with 5 mL FloSeal on each side and sprayed with CoSeal afterward without placing drains. In 14 of 50 patients (28%), LCs were detected. In a subgroup of patients with cervical cancer (88% of the cohort), symptomatic LCs occurred in 11% in group A and 18% in group B. Operative revision of symptomatic LCs was necessary in 5% and 18% in groups A and B, respectively (p = .66). Mean Hospital stay was significant shorter in group A (6 days) versus B (8 days) (p = .027).
The results of this case-controlled pilot study indicate that the application of FloSeal and CoSeal after transperitoneal LAE is feasible and safe, may reduce hospital stay, and may potentially decrease the rate of symptomatic LCs in patients with gynecologic malignancies.
To demonstrate a laparoscopic vaginal-assisted nerve-sparing radical trachelectomy.
An edited educational video, including a step-by-step description of the procedure.
Radical trachelectomy is the ...main surgical indication for selected cases of initial cervical cancer with a fertility-sparing approach. Although transvaginal access is the most traditional route, this technique has not gained widespread acceptance because of the complexity of the ureteral dissection and the limited amount of resected parametrial tissue. This video describes a laparoscopic technique including an adequate parametrial resection with autonomic preservation (C1 level) and a standard laparoscopic ureteric dissection under direct visualization. All parametrial dissections were performed by laparoscopy using a nerve-sparing technique. The uterine vessels were well dissected and transected at their origin. The colpotomy was performed by laparoscopy with a 1-cm vaginal margin using a monopolar energy hook. To achieve an adequate endocervical margin and to avoid thermal injury to the endocervix, the cervical section was performed transvaginally with a cold knife. The specimen was then retrieved, and a segment of the remaining cervix was removed for frozen section analysis. If the margin was free of tumor, the cervical-vaginal anastomosis was performed transvaginally. An endocervical device was placed to avoid postoperative cervical stenosis.
Laparoscopic vaginal-assisted nerve-sparing radical trachelectomy.
This video demonstrates a reproducible laparoscopic technique for radical trachelectomy with a nerve-sparing technique. The vaginal route was used at the moment of sectioning the cervix/isthmus to permit adequate margin evaluation.