Cancers (Mar 2023)

The Risk of Recurrence in Endometrial Cancer Patients with Low-Volume Metastasis in the Sentinel Lymph Nodes: A Retrospective Multi-Institutional Study

  • Alessandro Buda,
  • Cristiana Paniga,
  • Salih Taskin,
  • Michael Mueller,
  • Ignacio Zapardiel,
  • Francesco Fanfani,
  • Andrea Puppo,
  • Jvan Casarin,
  • Andrea Papadia,
  • Elena De Ponti,
  • Tommaso Grassi,
  • Jessica Mauro,
  • Hasan Turan,
  • Dogan Vatansever,
  • Mete Gungor,
  • Firat Ortag,
  • Sara Imboden,
  • Virginia Garcia-Pineda,
  • Stefan Mohr,
  • Franziska Siegenthaler,
  • Stefania Perotto,
  • Fabio Landoni,
  • Fabio Ghezzi,
  • Giovanni Scambia,
  • Cagatay Taskiran,
  • Robert Fruscio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 7
p. 2052

Abstract

Read online

The aim of this study was to assess the impact of low-volume metastasis (LVM) on disease-free survival (DFS) in women with apparent early-stage endometrial cancer (EC) who underwent sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping. Patients with pre-operative early-stage EC were retrospectively collected from an international collaboration including 13 referring institutions. A total of 1428 patients were included in this analysis. One hundred and eighty-six patients (13%) had lymph node involvement. Fifty-nine percent of positive SLN exhibited micrometastases, 26.9% micrometastases, and 14% isolated tumor cells. Seventeen patients with positive lymph nodes did not receive any adjuvant therapy. At a median follow-up of 33.3 months, the disease had recurred in 114 women (8%). Patients with micrometastases in the lymph nodes had a worse prognosis of disease-free survival compared to patients with negative nodes or LVM. The rate of recurrence was significantly higher for women with micrometastases than those with low-volume metastases (HR = 2.61; p = 0.01). The administration of adjuvant treatment in patients with LVM, without uterine risk factors, remains a matter of debate and requires further evaluation.

Keywords