Investigator

Adiego-Calvo Ignacio

Centro Mdico Sanitas Zaragoza

AIAdiego-Calvo Igna…
Papers(1)
Prognostic significan…
Collaborators(8)
Berta Díaz-FeijooBoukichou Abdelkader …Fernández González Se…Guijarro Campillo Alb…Iacoponi SaraMarcos-Sanmartín Jose…Mariano Laguna-OlmosOliver Pérez María de…
Institutions(9)
Centro Mdico Sanitas …Hospital Clínic de Ba…Center For Biomedical…Hospital Universitari…Hospital Virgen De La…Hospital Universitari…Instituto De Investig…Hospital Universitari…Universidad Compluten…

Papers

Prognostic significance of molecular classification in high-risk endometrial cancer patients undergoing sentinel lymph node mapping

The adoption of selective sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) as a viable alternative to lymphadenectomy, along with the redefinition of nodal risk groups based on molecular classification, has significantly changed the management of early-stage, high-risk preoperative endometrial cancer. A retrospective, multicenter study was conducted under the auspices of the Spanish Gynecologic Oncology Group to evaluate recurrence rates and oncologic outcomes in patients stratified by molecular risk. Three groups were compared: SLNB alone (G1), SLNB combined with pelvic and/or para-aortic lymphadenectomy (G2), and pelvic and/or para-aortic lymphadenectomy without SLNB (G3). The primary endpoint was recurrence rate; secondary endpoints included disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival (OS), recurrence patterns. A total of 221 patients from 14 centers were included, with a median follow-up of 24.4 months (IQR 17-42). Forty-four patients (19.9 %) experienced recurrence. Relapse rates were 15.4 % in G1, 15.8 % in G2, and 22.2 % in G3 (p = 0.479). DFS rates were 84.6 % in G1, 84.1 % in G2, and 77.8 % in G3 (p = 0.56). OS rates were 94.2 %, 90.9 %, and 92.6 %, respectively (p = 0.651). Among the 44 patients with documented recurrence, seven had nodal recurrences, with only two occurring in the group managed with SLNB alone. In this study, patients with early-stage, high-risk preoperative endometrial cancer-classified by molecular subgroups-showed no significant differences in relapse rates, disease-free survival, or overall survival across the three management strategies. Further prospective studies with longer follow-up are warranted to validate these preliminary findings.

6Works
1Papers
8Collaborators
Links & IDs
0000-0001-7184-2529

Scopus: 56403240200