Current Oncology (Oct 2021)

Could the Long-Term Oncological Safety of Laparoscopic Surgery in Low-Risk Endometrial Cancer also Be Valid for the High–Intermediate- and High-Risk Patients? A Multi-Center Turkish Gynecologic Oncology Group Study Conducted with 2745 Endometrial Cancer Cases. (TRSGO-End-001)

  • Mehmet Ali Vardar,
  • Ahmet Baris Guzel,
  • Salih Taskin,
  • Mete Gungor,
  • Nejat Ozgul,
  • Coskun Salman,
  • Umran Kucukgoz-Gulec,
  • Ghanim Khatib,
  • Cagatay Taskiran,
  • Ilkkan Dünder,
  • Firat Ortac,
  • Kunter Yuce,
  • Cosan Terek,
  • Tayup Simsek,
  • Aydın Ozsaran,
  • Anil Onan,
  • Gonca Coban,
  • Samet Topuz,
  • Fuat Demirkiran,
  • Ozguc Takmaz,
  • M. Faruk Kose,
  • Ahmet Gocmen,
  • Gulsah Seydaoglu,
  • Derya Gumurdulu,
  • Ali Ayhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28060368
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 6
pp. 4328 – 4340

Abstract

Read online

This study was conducted to compare the long-term oncological outcomes of laparotomy and laparoscopic surgeries in endometrial cancer under the light of the 2016 ESMO-ESGO-ESTRO risk classification system, with particular focus on the high–intermediate- and high-risk categories. Using multicentric databases between January 2005 and January 2016, disease-free and overall survivals of 2745 endometrial cancer cases were compared according to the surgery route (laparotomy vs. laparoscopy). The high–intermediate- and high-risk patients were defined with respect to the 2016 ESMO-ESGO-ESTRO risk classification system, and they were analyzed with respect to differences in survival rates. Of the 2745 patients, 1743 (63.5%) were operated by laparotomy, and the remaining were operated with laparoscopy. The total numbers of high–intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer cases were 734 (45%) patients in the laparotomy group and 307 (30.7%) patients in the laparoscopy group. Disease-free and overall survivals were not statistically different when compared between laparoscopy and laparotomy groups in terms of low-, intermediate-, high–intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer. In conclusion, regardless of the endometrial cancer risk category, long-term oncological outcomes of the laparoscopic approach were found to be comparable to those treated with laparotomy. Our results are encouraging to consider laparoscopic surgery for high–intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer cases.

Keywords