Diagnostic Pathology (Jan 2023)

Preoperative and intraoperative assessment of myometrial invasion in patients with FIGO stage I non-endometrioid endometrial carcinoma—a large-scale, multi-center, and retrospective study

  • Xiaohang Yang,
  • Jingjing Yin,
  • Yu Fu,
  • Yuanming Shen,
  • Chuyao Zhang,
  • Shuzhong Yao,
  • Congjian Xu,
  • Min Xia,
  • Ge Lou,
  • Jihong Liu,
  • Bei Lin,
  • Jianliu Wang,
  • Weidong Zhao,
  • Jieqing Zhang,
  • Wenjun Cheng,
  • Hongyan Guo,
  • Ruixia Guo,
  • Fengxia Xue,
  • Xipeng Wang,
  • Lili Han,
  • Xiaomao Li,
  • Ping Zhang,
  • Jianguo Zhao,
  • Wenting Li,
  • Yingyu Dou,
  • Zizhuo Wang,
  • Jingbo Liu,
  • Kezhen Li,
  • Gang Chen,
  • Chaoyang Sun,
  • Pengming Sun,
  • Weiguo Lu,
  • Qin Yao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13000-023-01294-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Myometrial invasion is a prognostic factor for lymph node metastases and decreased survival in non-endometrioid endometrial carcinoma patients. Herein, we explored the mode of myometrial invasion diagnosis in FIGO stage I non-endometrioid carcinoma and evaluated the differences in diagnostic efficiency among intraoperative frozen section (IFS), intraoperative gross examination (IGE), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and computed tomography (CT) in clinical practice. Finally, we suggested which test should be routinely performed. Method This was a historical cohort study nationwide with 30 centers in China between January 2000 and December 2019. Clinical data, including age, histology, method of myometrial invasion evaluation (MRI, CT, IGE, and IFS), and final diagnosis of postoperative paraffin sections, were collected from 490 non-endometrioid endometrial carcinoma (serous, clear cell, undifferentiated, mixed carcinoma, and carcinosarcoma) women in FIGO stage I. Results Among the 490 patients, 89.59% presented myometrial invasion. The methods reported for myometrial invasion assessment were IFS in 23.47%, IGE in 69.59%, MRI in 37.96%, and CT in 10.20% of cases. The highest concordance was detected between IFS and postoperative paraffin sections (Kappa = 0.631, accuracy = 93.04%), followed by IGE (Kappa = 0.303, accuracy = 82.40%), MRI (Kappa = 0.131, accuracy = 69.35%), and CT (Kappa = 0.118, accuracy = 50.00%). A stable diagnostic agreement between IFS and the final results was also found through the years (2000–2012: Kappa = 0.776; 2013–2014: Kappa = 0.625; 2015–2016: Kappa = 0.545; 2017–2019: Kappa = 0.652). Conclusion In China, the assessment of myometrial invasion in non-endometrioid endometrial carcinoma is often performed via IGE, but the reliability is relatively low in contrast to IFS. In clinical practice, IFS is a reliable method that can help accurately assess myometrial invasion and intraoperative decision-making (lymph node dissection or not). Hence, it should be routinely performed in non-endometrioid endometrial carcinoma patients.

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