Management of early endometrial cancer is contentious these days with little agreement between oncologists as well as across MDTs or tumour boards and indeed across countries. This is because of the state of knowledge with regards to risk factors in early endometrial cancer; although we recognise risk factors affect outcome, we haven't yet been able to demonstrate that our treatments make a significant difference. We have reviewed available literature on LVSI and are able to demonstrate that it is an independent risk factor for nodal metastasis as well as distant recurrence. We need a randomised trial integrating grade and LVSI and testing therapeutic options of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. However, it is unlikely to see the light of day. Therefore, we are left with this knowledge of prognostic factors and it is our duty to integrate this into our decision-making during our multidisciplinary team meetings and make decisions tailored to individual patient circumstances.
Cancer treatment may result in loss of ovarian function through surgical removal of the ovaries, chemotherapy or radiation. While menopausal symptoms, such as hot flushes, night sweats, sleep disturbance, memory concerns and mood issues can be extremely bothersome to some women going through menopause naturally, women who undergo an induced menopause usually experience more sudden and severe symptoms. Pain and vaginal dryness can occur whether a woman has a sexual partner or not. In women with breast cancer, the aetiology of impaired sexual functioning, and lowered sexual desire, is often multifactorial, and may be related to physical and/or psychological reasons. Pain and vaginal dryness in women without a history of breast cancer can usually be safely treated with vaginal estrogens, in the form of a cream, pessary or ring, and simple lubricants or vaginal moisturisers. Safe usage of vaginal estrogen replacement therapy in breast cancer patients has not been studied within randomised clinical trials of long duration; the guidelines below reflect a clinical consensus.
Our review confirms that the incorporation of 18F-FDG PET CT during radiotherapy planning may decrease inter-observer variability during target delineation. It can also provide useful functional information regarding the tumour, which may facilitate the development of techniques for dose escalation and 'dose painting' not only for primary disease, especially in cervical cancer, but also nodal metastasis. The utilisation of this functional modality in external beam radiotherapy planning, particularly in locally advanced cervical malignancy, is an exciting topic that warrants further prospective research. Perhaps the most valuable role may be the potential to deliver dose escalation to 18F-FDG PET CT avid targets previously limited by organ at risk constraints, now that we have significantly more advanced radiotherapy planning tools at our disposal.
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