Investigator

Alicia Hernandez Gutiérrez

Coordinadora del Área de Ginecología en funciones · Hospital Universitario La Paz, Ginecología y Obstetricia

AHGAlicia Hernandez …
Papers(4)
Simple radiologic ass…Effect of tumor burde…The extent of aortic …Growing teratoma synd…
Collaborators(10)
Antonio Gil-MorenoBerta Díaz-FeijooIgnacio ZapardielCarlos Martínez-GómezClaire IllacDenis QuerleuEmanuela SpagnoloFederico MigliorelliFrédéric GuyonGwénaël Ferron
Institutions(8)
Hospital Universitari…Universitat Autònoma …Hospital Clínic de Ba…Institut Universitair…Institut Claudius Reg…Agostino Gemelli Univ…Hpital Intercommunal …Institut Bergonié

Papers

Simple radiologic assessment of visceral obesity and prediction of surgical morbidity in endometrial cancer patients undergoing laparoscopic aortic lymphadenectomy: A reliability and accuracy study

AbstractAimTo evaluate the reliability of sagittal abdominal diameter (SAD)—a surrogate of visceral obesity—in magnetic resonance imaging, and its accuracy to predict the surgical morbidity of aortic lymphadenectomy.MethodsWe conducted a multicenter reliability (phase 1) and accuracy (phase 2) cohort study in three Spanish referral hospitals. We retrospectively analyzed data from the STELLA‐2 randomized controlled trial that included high‐risk endometrial cancer patients undergoing minimally invasive surgical staging. Patients were classified into subgroups: conventional versus robotic‐assisted laparoscopy, and transperitoneal versus extraperitoneal technique. In the first phase, we measured the agreement of three SAD measurements (at the umbilicus, renal vein, and inferior mesenteric artery) and selected the most reliable one. In phase 2, we evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of SAD to predict surgical morbidity. Surgical morbidity was the main outcome measure, it was defined by a core outcome set including variables related to blood loss, operative time, surgical complications, and para‐aortic lymphadenectomy difficulty.ResultsIn phase 1, all measurements showed good inter‐rater and intra‐rater agreement. Umbilical SAD (u‐SAD) was the most reliable one. In phase 2, we included 136 patients. u‐SAD had a good diagnostic accuracy to predict surgical morbidity in patients undergoing transperitoneal laparoscopic lymphadenectomy (0.73 in ROC curve). It performed better than body mass index and other anthropometric measurements. We calculated a cut‐off point of 246 mm (sensitivity: 0.56, specificity: 0.80).Conclusionsu‐SAD is a simple, reliable, and potentially useful measurement to predict surgical morbidity in endometrial cancer patients undergoing minimally invasive surgical staging, especially when facing transperitoneal aortic lymphadenectomy.

Effect of tumor burden and radical surgery on survival difference between upfront, early interval or delayed cytoreductive surgery in ovarian cancer

We sought to evaluate the impact on survival of tumor burden and surgical complexity in relation to the number of cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) in patients with advanced ovarian cancer (OC) with minimal (CC-1) or no residual disease (CC-0). This retrospective study included patients with International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics IIIC-IV stage OC who underwent debulking surgery at 4 high-volume institutions between January 2008 and December 2015. We assessed the overall survival (OS) of primary debulking surgery (PDS group), early interval debulking surgery after 3-4 cycles of NACT (early IDS group) and delayed debulking surgery after 6 cycles (DDS group) with CC-0 or CC-1 according to peritoneal cancer index (PCI) and Aletti score. Five hundred forty-nine women were included: 175 (31.9%) had PDS, 224 (40.8%) early IDS and 150 (27.3%) DDS. Regardless of Aletti score, median OS after PDS was significantly higher than after early IDS or DDS, but the survival difference was higher in women with an Aletti score 10, there were no differences between PDS and early IDS, but DDS was associated with decreased OS. The benefit of complete PDS compared with NACT was maximal in patients with a low complexity score. In patients with low tumor burden, there was a survival benefit of PDS over early IDS or DDS. In women with high tumor load, DDS impaired the oncological outcome.

The extent of aortic lymphadenectomy in locally advanced cervical cancer impacts on survival

The prognostic impact of surgical paraaortic staging remains unclear in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC). The objective of our study was to evaluate the results of the surgical technique of preoperative aortic lymphadenectomy in LACC related to tumor burden and disease spread to assess its influence on survival. Data of 1,072 patients with cervical cancer were taken from 11 Spanish hospitals (Spain-Gynecologic Oncology Group [GOG] working group). Complete aortic lymphadenectomy surgery (CALS) was considered when the lymph nodes (LNs) were excised up to the left renal vein. The extent of the disease was performed evaluating the LNs by calculating the geometric means and quantifying the log odds between positive LNs and negative LNs. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate the survival distribution. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to account for the influence of multiple variables. A total of 394 patients were included. Pathological analysis revealed positive aortic LNs in 119 patients (30%). LODDS cut-off value of -2 was established as a prognostic indicator. CALS and LODDS <-2 were associated with better disease free survival and overall survival than suboptimal aortic lymphadenectomy surgery and LODDS ≥-2. In a multivariate model analysis, CALS is revealed as an independent prognostic factor in LACC. When performing preoperative surgical staging in LACC, it is not advisable to take simple samples from the regional nodes. Radical dissection of the aortic and pelvic regions offers a more reliable staging of the LNs and has a favorable influence on survival.

14Works
4Papers
23Collaborators

Positions

2016–

Coordinadora del Área de Ginecología en funciones

Hospital Universitario La Paz · Ginecología y Obstetricia

2013–

Jefe de Sección del Servicio de Ginecologia y Obstetricia

Hospital Universitario La Paz · Servicio de Obstetricia y Ginecología

2011–

Profesor Tutor

Hospital Universitario La Paz · Obstetricia y Ginecología

2011–

Profesora y subdirectora de Máster

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid · Cirugía Endoscópica Ginecológica

2000–

Médico Adjunto Especialista

Hospital Universitario La Paz · Servicio de Obstetricia y Ginecología

2009–

Profesor Asociado

Hospital Universitario La Paz · Departamento de Ginecología y Obstetricia

Education

2004

Doctor en Medicina y Cirugía

Universidad Autonoma de Madrid · Medicina y Cirugía

2000

Especialista en Obstetricia y Ginecologóa

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid · Medicina y Cirugía

1994

Licenciatura en Medicina y Cirugía

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid · Medicina y Cirugía