1991
DOI: 10.1016/0020-7292(91)90593-t
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Hysterectomy with extended surgical staging and radiotherapy versus hysterectomy alone and radiotherapy in stage I endometrial cancer: A comparison of complication rates

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Adjuvant therapy for patients with early‐stage endometrial carcinoma usually consists of radiation therapy. The reported rates of toxicity or serious toxicity associated with radiation therapy range from 7% to 20% 14, 20–22. A marker to identify those patients who are at a very low risk of recurrence could be used to avoid unnecessary adjuvant therapy and lessen the morbidity and expense associated with treating endometrial carcinoma.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adjuvant therapy for patients with early‐stage endometrial carcinoma usually consists of radiation therapy. The reported rates of toxicity or serious toxicity associated with radiation therapy range from 7% to 20% 14, 20–22. A marker to identify those patients who are at a very low risk of recurrence could be used to avoid unnecessary adjuvant therapy and lessen the morbidity and expense associated with treating endometrial carcinoma.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The current trend for adjuvant radiotherapy in endometrial carcinoma is to treat patients with deep myometrial invasion (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics [FIGO] Stage IC), irrespective of tumor grade or in the absence of deep myoinvasion (FIGO Stage IB), with poorly differentiated tumors (Grade 3). However, it is known that radiotherapy‐related morbidity increases dramatically after pelvic and aortic lymphadenectomy 35. In addition, the elderly patients are particularly prone to complications from pelvic irradiation due to the prevalence of bowel diverticula and intestinal adhesions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Peritumoral or subserosal myometrial injection may enable detection of isolated para-aortic node involvement, without pelvic node involvement, which occurs in 1% to 3% of patients with endometrial cancer [31,32]. Detection of isolated para-aortic node involvement would improve outcome prediction and may decrease the complication rate in patients treated by postoperative whole-pelvis radiation therapy by limiting the use of extended surgical staging [33]. Nevertheless further studies are needed to address area of concern such as the apparently low SLN detection rate (61% to 82%) [3,20,23], the high false-negative rate (up to 50% in the study by Burke et al [3]), the poor results of sub-serosal injections [34], and the possible risk of cancer cell dissemination.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%