JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Prognostic Importance of the Site of Recurrence in Patients With Metastatic Recurrent Cervical Cancer.

PURPOSE: The clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with metastatic recurrent cervical cancer remain poorly understood. The goals of the present study were to investigate the survival outcomes according to the recurrence site in a large cohort of cervical cancer patients.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: Of 1322 patients with primary cervical cancer from 2000 to 2013, 205 with recurrence after primary or adjuvant postoperative radiation were enrolled retrospectively. Aggressive salvage therapy (AST), which was defined as salvage therapy that aimed not only to relieve symptoms but also to ablate recurrent tumors by the single or combined application of surgical resection of local recurrence, metastasectomy, or metastasis-directed irradiation, followed by chemotherapy, was performed according to our institutional guidelines. The patterns of recurrence, application rate and mode of AST, and survival outcomes were evaluated retrospectively under approval from the institutional review board.

RESULTS: Regarding the pattern of recurrence, distant-only (DO) recurrence was most common (59.5%), followed by combined (21.5%), central (cervix or vaginal stump; 10.7%), and pelvic (pelvic lymph nodes or pelvic side wall; 8.3%) recurrence. Two subgroups (distant lymph nodes and lung parenchyma) of the DO group demonstrated remarkably good prognosis and were categorized as type A DO; the other subgroups were labeled type B DO. Patients with type A DO recurrence constituted 36% of all recurrences and 83.8% of them received AST. The 5-year overall survival rates were significantly greater in the type A DO group than in the other groups (44.8% in the type A DO group, 12.6% in the pelvic group, and 6.8% in the type B DO group).

CONCLUSIONS: We identified a patient subgroup with favorable outcomes after salvage therapy, type A DO, defined as recurrence in the distant lymph nodes only or in the lung parenchyma only. A future prospective trial is needed to investigate whether AST improves survival in this group.

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