KMID : 1137020070180020122
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Journal of Gynecologic Oncology 2007 Volume.18 No. 2 p.122 ~ p.130
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Tumor volume and invasion to uterine body assessed by magnetic resonance imaging in the prediction of outcome for stage 2 cervical cancer
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Kim Hun-Jung
Kim Woo-Chul No Jon-Gu Lee Mi-Jo Guak Hee-Keun Jeong Jin-Hwa Bae Hyo-Sook
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Abstract
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>Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic significance of primary tumor volume and uterine corpus invasion assessed by MRI in stage II uterine cervical cancer patients treated by concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
Methods: Fifty-two patients diagnosed with stage II cervical carcinoma were entered into the study. The tumor volume was calculated by the equation (Volume=width¡¿length¡¿height¡¿¥ð/6) as an ellipsoid approximation. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify the prognostic factors for overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), pelvic control (PC), and distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS).
Results: The 5-year OS, DFS, PC, and DMFS rates were 65.8%, 59.3%, 72.6%, and 79.9%, respectively. The average volume of primary cervical tumor on MRI was 29.5 ml (5-109) and volume was not correlated with stage (p=0.180). Corpus invasion was exhibited in 50.0% and 93.8% of patients with small tumor volume (£¼30 ml) and large tumor volume (¡Ã30 ml), respectively; and strongly correlated with tumor volume (p£¼0.001). By univariate analyses, larger clinical tumor diameter (p=0.031), positive pelvic lymph node (p=0.033), uterine corpus invasion (p=0.045), and larger tumor volume (p=0.003) showed a statistically significantly relation to worse survival. In multivariate analyses, dividing patients according to whether the tumor volume was more or less than 30 ml predicted OS (p=0.048) and uterine corpus invasion also predicted DFS (p=0.042).
Conclusion: Tumor volume and uterine corpus invasion determined by pre-treatment MRI examinations were significant prognostic factors for patients with invasive cervical carcinoma treated with concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
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KEYWORD
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Cervical cancer, Magnetic resonance imaging, Tumor volume, Radiotherapy
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