The guidelines cover comprehensively staging, management, and follow-up for patients with cervical cancer. Management includes fertility sparing treatment; stage T1a, T1b1/T2a1, clinically occult cervical cancer diagnosed after simple hysterectomy; early and locally advanced cervical cancer; primary distant metastatic disease; cervical cancer in pregnancy; and recurrent disease. Principles of radiotherapy and pathological evaluation are defined.
Subjective and objective cure rates 10 years after the tension-free vaginal tape-obturator procedure were 69% and 64%, respectively. The vaginal extrusion rate in this study was slightly higher than in other series but major long-term complications appeared to be rare.
The main objective is to reduce the frequency of abdominal hysterectomy. Patients should be counseled and made aware of uterus-sparing alternatives to hysterectomy so that they are able to make informed decisions.
This is the first collaborative Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Society guideline for optimal perioperative care for vulvar and vaginal surgeries. An Embase and PubMed database search of publications was performed. Studies on each topic within the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery vulvar and vaginal outline were selected, with emphasis on meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, and prospective cohort studies. All studies were reviewed and graded according to the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation system. All recommendations on the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery topics are based on the best available evidence. The level of evidence for each item is presented.
Self-expandable metal stents 7 mm in diameter were percutaneously implanted into 13 ureters in 10 patients with malignant ureteral obstruction not amenable to double-J stent placement. In nine ureters, one stent was placed, and in four ureters, two overlapping stents were placed. Primary reconstitution of ureteral patency was achieved in all ureters. After 1-2 weeks, four ureters showed a urothelial reaction encroaching on the lumen of the ureter, and a double-J stent was placed coaxially. One ureter was occluded by urothelial hyperplasia 4 weeks after stent placement, and a double-J stent was therefore placed. One ureter was occluded 8 months after stent placement by distal tumor overgrowth. The other ureters showed no signs of obstruction during a follow-up of 3-14 (average, 5.8) months. Peristalsis was preserved at both ends of the stent in all ureters. The use of this stent alone or in combination with a double-J stent alleviated upper urinary tract obstruction and avoided external drainage in all patients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.