Cancers (Mar 2024)

Long-Term Follow-Up Outcomes in Women with In Situ/Microinvasive Adenocarcinoma of the Uterine Cervix Undergoing Conservative Treatment—Cervical Adenocarcinoma Study Group Italian Society of Colposcopy and Cervico-Vaginal Pathology

  • Luca Giannella,
  • Giovanni Delli Carpini,
  • Jacopo Di Giuseppe,
  • Camilla Grelloni,
  • Giorgio Bogani,
  • Marco Dri,
  • Francesco Sopracordevole,
  • Nicolò Clemente,
  • Giorgio Giorda,
  • Rosa De Vincenzo,
  • Maria Teresa Evangelista,
  • Barbara Gardella,
  • Mattia Dominoni,
  • Ermelinda Monti,
  • Chiara Alessi,
  • Lara Alessandrini,
  • Angela Guerriero,
  • Alessio Pagan,
  • Marta Caretto,
  • Alessandro Ghelardi,
  • Andrea Amadori,
  • Massimo Origoni,
  • Maggiorino Barbero,
  • Francesco Raspagliesi,
  • Tommaso Simoncini,
  • Paolo Vercellini,
  • Arsenio Spinillo,
  • Giovanni Scambia,
  • Andrea Ciavattini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16061241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 1241

Abstract

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Objective: The present study aimed to assess long-term follow-up outcomes in women with in situ/microinvasive adenocarcinoma (AC) of the uterine cervix treated conservatively. Methods: Retrospective multi-institutional study including women with early glandular lesions and 5-year follow-up undergoing fertility-sparing treatment. Independent variables associated with recurrence were evaluated. Logistic regression analysis and Kaplan–Meier survival analysis with Logrank test were performed. Results: Of 269 women diagnosed with in situ/microinvasive AC, 127 participants underwent conservative treatment. During follow-up, recurrences were found in nine women (7.1%). The only factor associated with recurrence during follow-up was positive high-risk Human Papillomavirus (hr-HPV) testing (odds ratio 6.21, confidence interval 1.47–26.08, p = 0.012). HPV positivity in follow-up showed a recurrence rate of 21.7% against 3.8% in patients who were HPV-negative (p = 0.002, Logrank test). Among women with negative high-risk HPV tests in follow-up, recurrences occurred in 20.0% of non-usual-type histology vs. 2.1% of usual-type cases (p = 0.005). Conclusion: HPV testing in follow-up is of pivotal importance in women with early glandular lesions undergoing conservative treatment, given its recurrence predictive value. However, women who are high-risk HPV-negative in follow-up with non-usual-type histopathology may represent a sub-population at increased risk of recurrences. Further studies should confirm these findings.

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