Investigator

Giovanni Scambia

Scientific Director IRCCS · Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS Università Cattolica del S. Cuore, Dipartimento Scienze Salute della Donna, del Bambino e di Sanità Pubblica

GSGiovanni Scambia
Papers(12)
Real-life observation…Trabectedin maintenan…Value of frozen secti…Extending the timing …Environment, lifestyl…Failure of early inte…Efficacy of Neoadjuva…Hyperthermic Intraper…Role of artificial in…New windows of surgic…Concurrent endometria…Sentinel node mapping…
Collaborators(10)
Anna FagottiNicolò BizzarriFrancesco FanfaniGiuseppe VizzielliStefano RestainoAndrea RosatiClaudia MarchettiMartina ArcieriAndrea MarianiMatteo Pavone
Institutions(5)
Agostino Gemelli Univ…Università degli Stud…Universit Cattolica D…Mayo ClinicUniversity of Strasbo…

Papers

Real-life observational study on niraparib in older patients with primary tubo-ovarian cancer: a focus on safety and efficacy

Abstract Background Niraparib is approved for maintenance treatment of tubo-ovarian cancer patients, but data on older patients are limited. This retrospective study evaluated its safety and efficacy in primary advanced tubo-ovarian cancer, focusing on patients ≥ 75 years. Methods Women aged ≥ 50 years diagnosed with primary high-grade serous tubo-ovarian cancer, treated with niraparib between 2019–2023, were enrolled. Patients were stratified into three groups: A (50–64 years), B (65–74 years), and C (≥ 75 years). The primary outcome was progression-free survival. The secondary outcomes were toxicity and dose reduction. Results 127 patients were identified: 62 (48.8%) group A, 26 (20.5%) group B, and 39 (30.7%) group C. Baseline characteristics were comparable across groups, excluding a higher proportion of interval cytoreductive surgeries ( p  = 0.001), residual tumor ( p  = 0.01) and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) > 1 ( p  = 0.01) in group C. Most patients started niraparib at 200 mg/day with dose reductions primarily occurred within fourth cycle. Dose reductions were observed in 77.4%, 69.2% and 56.4% of patients in groups A, B, and C, respectively ( p  = 0.08). In patients ≥ 75 years, 26 (66.7%) discontinued treatment due to disease progression (48.7%) or toxicity (17.9%). There were no significant differences in common or grade ≥ 3 adverse events between groups. Progression-free survival was 12 months (95%CI: 2.0–25.0) for group A, 29 months (95%CI: 11.0–52.0) for group B, and 16 months (95%CI: 1.0–31.0) for group C ( p  = 0.78). Conclusions Our findings suggest that niraparib is safe and well-tolerated in aged ≥ 75 years. Concerns about toxicity should not preclude the enrollment of elderly patients in treatment regiments.

Trabectedin maintenance therapy after liposomal doxorubicin plus trabectedin combination in patients with relapsed ovarian cancer: the randomized, phase II TRAMANT study

TRAMANT was a multicenter, randomized phase II study assessing the non-inferiority of trabectedin (TRB) as maintenance therapy in patients with relapsed ovarian cancer who responded to initial treatment with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) + TRB. Patients with partially platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer, defined by a platinum-free interval of 6-12 months, were randomly assigned to receive either TRB alone or continued combination therapy. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival, with secondary endpoints including overall survival, objective response rate, and quality of life assessments. Sixty-seven patients were enrolled (median age, 59 years; range; 41-74); most had International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage III disease (70%) and high-grade serous carcinoma (85%). The median time to recurrence after prior platinum therapy was 8.5 months (range; 6-12), and the median follow-up was 24 months (range; 6-44). Patients received a median of 6 cycles in both arms. Median progression-free survival was 9.8 months with TRB and 16.6 months with PLD + TRB; overall survival was comparable (19.1 vs 23.8 months). Grade 3-4 adverse events occurred in 21% (TRB) and 17% (PLD + TRB), with neutropenia and anemia being the most common toxicities. The results suggest that TRB may be a viable maintenance option for patients with relapsed ovarian cancer, providing a sustained response with favorable tolerability. Nonetheless, the small sample size underscores the need for further research to validate these findings. Studies with larger cohorts are necessary to confirm these results and optimize treatment strategies for recurrent ovarian cancer.

Value of frozen section to tailor surgical staging in apparent early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer

Frozen section (FS) has been shown to have high accuracy in determining ovarian malignancy. However, its utility in guiding surgical approaches, particularly, lymph node staging, for early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the post-test positive probability of FSs in identifying cases requiring lymph node or peritoneal staging. The secondary aims were sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy assessments. This retrospective study analyzed patients undergoing surgery for early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer with FS performed on ovarian masses between July 2007 and March 2023 at a tertiary center. The FS results were compared with the final histology (gold standard paraffin sections). The FS cases were categorized based on further actions as follows: lymph node staging (type A), peritoneal staging only (type B), or no additional procedures (type C). The patients were divided into group 1 (requiring lymph node and peritoneal staging) and group 2 (requiring only peritoneal staging). A comparison between specialized and general pathology diagnoses was also performed. Incorrect FS assessments were classified as under-diagnosed or over-diagnosed. Of the 715 patients, group 1 had appropriate staging in 425 of 447 cases, with 4.9% over-treatment. In group 2, staging was correct in 109 of 195 cases, with 44.1% under-treatment. For type A FSs, the post-test positive probability was 95% (95% CI 93% to 97%), with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy rates of 76.4%, 86.1%, and 78.6%, respectively. For type B FSs, the post-test positive probability was 56% (95% CI 50% to 61%), with sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy rates of 68.6%, 84.5%, and 81%, respectively. There was no significant difference in the agreement between the specialized and general pathology groups (p = 0.92). Frozen sections suggestive of a cancer diagnosis requiring peritoneal and lymph node staging in a population with apparent early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer are highly reliable. In the case of FSs suggesting only peritoneal staging, malignancy is frequently underestimated.

Extending the timing for secondary cytoreductive surgery after second-line chemotherapy in relapsed ovarian cancer: the EXTENSION study

Relapse remains a major issue for patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. Based on the DESKTOP III trial, international guidelines recommend secondary cytoreduction surgery when feasible before starting chemotherapy in platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer. Currently, neoadjuvant chemotherapy before secondary cytoreduction surgery is not advised outside of clinical trials. Recently, CHIPOR trial has shown the efficacy of secondary cytoreduction surgery with hyperthermic intra-peritoneal chemotherapy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in an unselected population with platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer. The primary aim of this study was to assess the rate of potential delayed secondary cytoreduction surgery after 6 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. This retrospective, monocentric, observational study included patients with platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer deemed unsuitable for secondary cytoreductive surgery after evaluation by a multidisciplinary tumor board and/or diagnostic laparoscopy from January 2020 to December 2023. After 6 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, secondary cytoreduction surgery feasibility was evaluated by applying criteria for upfront secondary cytoreduction surgery in patients with at least a partial response at computed tomography scan. Overall, 522 patients with platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer were evaluated; 165 were considered unsuitable for upfront secondary cytoreduction surgery and received second-line chemotherapy. After 6 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, secondary cytoreduction surgery was considered feasible in 48 patients (29.1%, group A), while 117 patients (70.9%, group B) remained ineligible for surgery. Predictors of secondary cytoreduction surgery feasibility were analyzed. Multivariate analysis identified a favorable modeled CA125 elimination rate constant K score at second-line chemotherapy (OR 7.29, 95% CI 2.91 to 18.30, p < .001) as the only independent predictor. Patients eligible for delayed secondary cytoreduction surgery showed significantly longer progression-free survival 2 and post-relapse survival (median progression-free survival 2 12.5 vs 7.9, p < .001; median post-relapse survival: not reached vs 28.5, p = .002). In a real-life approach in a tertiary oncological center, we showed that around 30% of women with platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer, initially deemed unsuitable for secondary cytoreduction surgery, can potentially undergo delayed secondary cytoreduction surgery following a favorable response to 6 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Environment, lifestyle, and cancer in women

AbstractEnvironmental and lifestyle factors significantly contribute to gynecological cancers. The risk of ovarian cancer, one the most lethal gynecological cancer, is associated with obesity, poor dietary habits, and environmental pollutants, exacerbating hormonal imbalances, inflammation, and oxidative stress. Protective factors, such as the Mediterranean diet and oral contraceptives, modulate risk by reducing ovulatory cycles, particularly in genetically predisposed women. Uterine cancer is associated with metabolic factors, with obesity driving hormonal disruptions and systemic inflammation. Physical inactivity and diets rich in animal fats increase the risk of endometrial cancer, along with air pollution and microbiome imbalances contribute to endometrial carcinogenesis. Cervical cancer is primarily driven by persistent high‐risk HPV infection, with smoking enhancing viral persistence and oncogenesis. Nutritional deficiencies in antioxidants and folate weaken immune defenses, while vaginal and gut microbiome dysbiosis fosters neoplastic progression. Vulvar and vaginal cancers, though less common, share risk factors such as obesity, smoking, and occupational exposures, disrupting immune responses and epithelial integrity. Microbial imbalances exacerbate these malignancies, creating a pro‐inflammatory microenvironment. The interplay between modifiable factors and genetic predisposition, including high‐penetrance mutations and polygenic risk scores, highlights the complexity complexity of prevention of gynecological cancers. Epigenetic mechanisms, such as DNA methylation and histone modifications, further modulate susceptibility and tumor progression, influenced by environmental and lifestyle exposures. In addition, promoting and supporting healthy lifestyle changes, including smoking cessation, increased physical activity, and a balanced diet, are crucial for improving long‐term outcomes and quality of life in gynecological cancer survivors. Addressing these factors through personalized prevention, leveraging predictive models incorporating genetics and modifiable risks, enables tailored lifestyle interventions and avoidance of environmental exposures. Combined with equitable public health initiatives, these strategies have the potential to reduce the burden of gynecological cancers and improve women's health globally.

Failure of early interval debulking surgery after standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy: May bevacizumab add something? A large retrospective study

Data are limited on the use of bevacizumab in neoadjuvant setting for High-Grade Serous ovarian Cancer (HGSC) patients. This study explores the effect of adding bevacizumab to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) following the failure of early Interval Debulking Surgery (eIDS). This monocentric study retrospectively enrolled FIGO stage IIIC-IV HGSC patients (2017-2021), persisting unresectable after three NACT cycles. Eligible patients had an ECOG performance status ≤2, were aged 40-75 years, and had no contraindications to bevacizumab administration. Patients were stratified whether they added bevacizumab from cycles 4 to 6 (CPB group) or not (CP group). The primary endpoint was the cytoreduction rate after six cycles (delayed IDS, dIDS). Overall, 58(23 %) patients received neoadjuvant bevacizumab(CPB), and 190 (77 %) did not (CP). Delayed IDS was performed in 117(47.6 %) patients (CPB:31-53.4 %; CP:86-45.8 %; p = 0.38), with complete gross resection rates of 83.9 % and 88.5 %, respectively (p = 0.72). Severe postoperative complications were comparable (CP: 8 %, CPB: 9.7 %, p = 0.069). Median overall survival (OS) for dIDS patients showed no significant difference (CPB: not reached, CP:38 months, p = 0.55), nor did progression-free survival (PFS; CPB:14 months, CP:12 months, p = 0.830). Conversely, among 130(52 %) patients persisting unresectable, bevacizumab significantly improved OS in the CPB group (not reached vs.18 months, p = 0.015), although PFS remained similar (CPB: 6 months, CP: 7 months, p = 0.741). While adding bevacizumab to NACT does not seem to increase the dIDS rate, it significantly extends OS in unresectable patients. Its use may be a valuable option in selected cases after eIDS' failure.

Efficacy of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy as pre-habilitation program in advanced epithelial ovarian cancer

Approximately 70 % of ovarian cancer patients present at diagnosis with advanced disease(AOC) and impaired clinical conditions, making them not ideal surgical candidates. We aimed to investigate whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy(NACT) can modify pre-operative characteristics of patients at high risk(HR) of perioperative complications, as defined in the Mayo Clinic Algorithm. We also compared their morbidity and survival outcomes with comparable HR women undergoing primary surgery (PCS). We retrospectively collected FIGO stage III and greater AOC patients undergoing either NACT-interval cytoreductive surgery(HR-NACT) or PCS from 01/2013 to 12/2022. HR features included: Albumin  1, stage IV disease, or complex surgery likely (more than hysterectomy, salpingo-oophorectomy and omentectomy). 400 patients were included. Among them, 298 met the criteria for the HR-NACT group; 203(68.1 %) underwent ICS after 3-4 cycles whislt 95(31.9 %) completed 6 NACT cycles. We reported an improvement in clinical variables in women undergoing 3-4 cycles of NACT: raise of ECOG = 0 rate(53.3 % vs 81.8 %; p < 0.001) and median albumin serum levels(3.0 g/dl vs 4.0 g/dl; p < 0.001). We identified 102 comparable HR-PCS patients. No difference in intraoperative complications was detected, while a difference was found in severe post-operative complications, favoring patients treated with both 3-4(5.4 % vs 18.6 % p = 0.0003) and 6 NACT cycles(7.8 % vs 18.6 %, p = 0.053). No difference in both DFS and OS was reported. We offer a rationale to combine non interventional pre-habilitation procedure with short term chemotherapy cycles, aiming to improve pre-operative conditions of selected HR patients.

Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy in Platinum-Sensitive Recurrent Ovarian Cancer: A Randomized Trial on Survival Evaluation (HORSE; MITO-18)

PURPOSE To investigate whether the addition of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) to secondary cytoreductive surgery (SCS) without neoadjuvant chemotherapy has a benefit on progression-free survival (PFS), as opposed to SCS alone in patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer (platinum-free interval, &gt;6 months). METHODS This was a multicenter randomized phase III study. Random assignment was performed at the time of surgery in cases with residual tumor ≤0.25 cm. HIPEC with cisplatin (CDDP) 75 mg/m 2 for 60 minutes at 41.5°C was administered at the end of surgery in the experimental arm. Both groups received postoperative platinum-based chemotherapy. The primary end point was PFS. The safety profile and postrecurrence survival (PRS) were the secondary end points. RESULTS A total of 167 patients underwent random assignment, 82 patients to SCS plus HIPEC (experimental arm) and 85 to SCS alone (control arm). The median follow-up was 83 months (IQR, 64-102). The median PFS was 23 months (95% CI, 17 to 29) in the group that underwent surgery alone and 25 months (95% CI, 18 to 32) in the group that underwent cytoreductive surgery with HIPEC. The probability of PRS at 5 years was 61.6% (95% CI, 50.8 to 72.4) in the SCS group and 75.9% (95% CI, 66.5 to 85.3) in the SCS plus HIPEC group. The incidence of postoperative adverse events of any grade was similar between the two groups. CONCLUSION The addition of HIPEC to complete or nearly complete primary SCS did not confer a benefit in terms of PFS in patients with platinum-sensitive peritoneal recurrence.

Role of artificial intelligence applied to ultrasound in gynecology oncology: A systematic review

AbstractThe aim of this paper was to explore the role of artificial intelligence (AI) applied to ultrasound imaging in gynecology oncology. Web of Science, PubMed, and Scopus databases were searched. All studies were imported to RAYYAN QCRI software. The overall quality of the included studies was assessed using QUADAS‐AI tool. Fifty studies were included, of these 37/50 (74.0%) on ovarian masses or ovarian cancer, 5/50 (10.0%) on endometrial cancer, 5/50 (10.0%) on cervical cancer, and 3/50 (6.0%) on other malignancies. Most studies were at high risk of bias for subject selection (i.e., sample size, source, or scanner model were not specified; data were not derived from open‐source datasets; imaging preprocessing was not performed) and index test (AI models was not externally validated) and at low risk of bias for reference standard (i.e., the reference standard correctly classified the target condition) and workflow (i.e., the time between index test and reference standard was reasonable). Most studies presented machine learning models (33/50, 66.0%) for the diagnosis and histopathological correlation of ovarian masses, while others focused on automatic segmentation, reproducibility of radiomics features, improvement of image quality, prediction of therapy resistance, progression‐free survival, and genetic mutation. The current evidence supports the role of AI as a complementary clinical and research tool in diagnosis, patient stratification, and prediction of histopathological correlation in gynecological malignancies. For example, the high performance of AI models to discriminate between benign and malignant ovarian masses or to predict their specific histology can improve the diagnostic accuracy of imaging methods.

New windows of surgical opportunity for gynecological cancers in the era of targeted therapies

Precision medicine through molecular profiling has taken a prominent role in the treatment of solid tumors and it is widely expected that this will continue to expand. With respect to gynecological cancers, a major change has particularly been observed in the treatment landscape of epithelial ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers. Regarding the former, maintenance therapy with either poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPi) and/or bevacizumab has become an indispensable treatment option following the traditional combination of cytoreductive surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy. Considering endometrial cancer, the molecular classification system has now been incorporated into virtually every guideline available and molecular-directed treatment strategies are currently being researched, presumably leading to a further transformation of its treatment paradigm. After all, treatment with immune-checkpoint inhibitors that target the programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) receptor has already been shown to significantly improve disease outcomes in these patients, especially in those with mismatch repair deficient, microsatellite stability-high (MMRd-MSI-H) disease. Similarly, in recurrent/metastatic cervical cancer patients, these agents elicited improved survival rates when being added to platinum-based chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab. Interestingly, implications of these targeted therapies for surgical management have been touched on to a minor extent, but are at least as intriguing. This review therefore aims to address the wide-ranging opportunities the molecular tumor characteristics and their corresponding targeted therapies have to offer for the surgical management of epithelial ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers, both in the primary and recurrent setting.

Concurrent endometrial cancer in atypical endometrial hyperplasia and the role of sentinel lymph nodes: clinical insights from a multicenter experience

This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of concurrent endometrial cancer in patients pre-operatively diagnosed with atypical endometrial hyperplasia undergoing hysterectomy. Additionally, we assessed the occurrence of high to intermediate-risk and high-risk tumors according to the ESGO-ESTRO-ESP classification. The study also compared surgical outcomes and complications between patients undergoing simple hysterectomy and those undergoing hysterectomy with sentinel lymph node biopsy. In this multicenter retrospective study, patients with a pre-operative diagnosis of atypical endometrial hyperplasia were identified and divided into two groups: Group 1, which included patients treated with total hysterectomy with or without bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and Group 2, where sentinel lymph node biopsy was incorporated into the standard surgical treatment. Among 460 patients with atypical endometrial hyperplasia, 192 received standard surgical management (Group 1) and 268 underwent sentinel lymph node biopsy (Group 2). A total of 47.2% (95% CI 42.6% to 51.7%) of patients were upgraded to endometrial cancer on final histopathological examination. High to intermediate-risk and high-risk tumors constituted 12.3% and 9.2% in Group 2 and 7.4% and 3.7% in Group 1. Lymph node metastases were identified in 7.6% of patients with concurrent endometrial cancer who underwent nodal assessment with at least unilateral mapping. Of the 12 sentinel lymph node metastases, 75.0% were micrometastases, 16.7% macrometastases, and 8.3% isolated tumor cells. No significant differences were found in estimated blood loss, operative time, and intra-operative and post-operative complications between the two groups. The rate of patients undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy doubled every 2 years (OR 2.010, p<0.001), reaching 79.1% in the last 2 years. This study found a prevalence of concurrent endometrial cancer of 47.2%, and sentinel lymph node biopsy provided prognostic and therapeutic information in 60.8% of cases. It also allowed for the adjustment of adjuvant therapy in 12.3% of high to intermediate-risk patients without increasing operative time or complication rates.

Sentinel node mapping in high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer: Analysis of 5-year oncologic outcomes

To assess 5-year oncologic outcomes of apparent early-stage high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer undergoing sentinel node mapping versus systematic lymphadenectomy. This is a multi-institutional retrospective, propensity-matched study evaluating data of high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer (according to ESGO/ESTRO/ESP guidelines) undergoing sentinel node mapping versus systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy (with and without para-aortic lymphadenectomy). Survival outcomes were assessed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazard methods. Overall, the charts of 242 patients with high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer were retrieved. Data on 73 (30.1%) patients undergoing hysterectomy plus sentinel node mapping were analyzed. Forty-two (57.5%) and 31 (42.5%) patients were classified in the high-intermediate and high-risk groups, respectively. Unilateral sentinel node mapping was achieved in all patients. Bilateral mapping was achieved in 67 (91.7%) patients. Three (4.1%) patients had site-specific lymphadenectomy (two pelvic areas only and one pelvic plus para-aortic area), while adjunctive nodal dissection was omitted in the hemipelvis of the other three (4.1%) patients. Sentinel nodes were detected in the para-aortic area in eight (10.9%) patients. Twenty-four (32.8%) patients were diagnosed with nodal disease. A propensity-score matching was used to compare the aforementioned group of patients undergoing sentinel node mapping with a group of patients undergoing lymphadenectomy. Seventy patient pairs were selected (70 having sentinel node mapping vs. 70 having lymphadenectomy). Patients undergoing sentinel node mapping experienced similar 5-year disease-free survival (HR: 1.233; 95%CI: 0.6217 to 2.444; p = 0.547, log-rank test) and 5-year overall survival (HR: 1.505; 95%CI: 0.6752 to 3.355; p = 0.256, log-rank test) than patients undergoing lymphadenectomy. Sentinel node mapping does not negatively impact 5-year outcomes of high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer. Further prospective studies are warranted.

Robotic-assisted versus conventional laparoscopic surgery in the management of obese patients with early endometrial cancer in the sentinel lymph node era: a randomized controlled study (RObese)

Nearly 65% of patients with endometrial cancer who undergo primary hysterectomy have concurrent obesity. Retrospective data show advantages in using robotic surgery in these patients compared with conventional laparoscopy, namely lower conversion rate, increased rate of same-day discharge, and reduced blood loss. Nevertheless, to date no prospective randomized controlled trials have compared laparoscopic surgery versus robotic-assisted surgery in morbidly obese patients. The robotic-assisted versus conventional laparoscopic surgery in the management of obese patients with early endometrial cancer in the sentinel lymph node era: a randomized controlled study (RObese) trial aims to find the most appropriate minimally invasive surgical approach in morbidly obese patients with endometrial carcinoma. Robotic surgery will reduce conversions to laparotomy in endometrial cancer patients with obesity compared with those who undergo surgery with conventional laparoscopy. This phase III multi-institutional study will randomize consecutive obese women with apparent early-stage endometrial cancer to either laparoscopic or robot-assisted surgery. The RObese trial will include obese (BMI≥30 kg/m Conversion rate to laparotomy between laparoscopic surgery versus robot-assisted surgery. RObese is a superiority trial. The clinical superiority margin for this study is defined as a difference in conversion rate of -6%. Assuming a significance level of 0.05 and a power of 80%, the study plans to randomize 566 patients. Patient recruitment will be completed by 2026, and follow-up will be completed by 2029 with presentation of data shortly thereafter. Two interim analyses are planned: one after the first 188 and the second after 376 randomized patients. NCT05974995.

Pattern of recurrence in endometrial cancer. The murderer always returns to the scene of the crime

Endometrial cancer recurrence occurs in about 18 % of patients. This study aims to analyze the pattern recurrence of endometrial cancer and the relationship between the initial site of primary disease and the relapse site in patients undergoing surgical treatment. We retrospectively reviewed all surgically treated patients with endometrial cancer selecting those with recurrence. We defined primary site disease as uterus, lymph nodes, or peritoneum according to pathology analysis of the surgical specimen. The site of recurrence was defined as vaginal cuff, lymph nodes, peritoneum, and parenchymatous organs. Our primary endpoint was to correlate the site of initial disease with the site of recurrence. The study enrolled 1416 patients. The overall recurrence rate was 17,5 % with 248 relapses included in the study. An increase of 9.9, 5.7, and 5.7 times in the odds of relapse on the lymph node, peritoneum, and abdominal parenchymatous sites respectively was observed in case of nodal initial disease (p < 0.001). A not significant difference in odds was observed in terms of vaginal cuff relapse (OR 0.9) between lymph node ad uterine primary disease (p = 0.78). An increasing OR of 8.7 times for nodal recurrences, 46.6 times for peritoneum, and 23.3 times for parenchymatous abdominal recurrences were found in the case of primary peritoneal disease (p < 0.001). Endometrial cancer tends to recur at the initial site of the disease. Intraoperative inspection of the adjacent sites of primary disease and targeted instrumental examination of the initial sites of disease during follow-up are strongly recommended.

Therapeutic role of para-aortic lymphadenectomy in patients with intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Lymph nodal involvement is a prognostic factor in endometrial cancer. The added value of para-aortic lymphadenectomy compared with pelvic nodal evaluation alone remains a matter of debate in the management of patients with intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer. A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to assess the prognostic value of para-aortic lymphadenectomy in terms of overall survival and disease-free survival in patients with intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer. The study adhered to the PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, Google Scholar and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched from January 2000 to April 2023. Studies on intermediate- and high-risk patients who underwent pelvic versus pelvic and para-aortic dissection were included in the analysis. The Methodological Index for Nonrandomized Studies (MINORS) and the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 tool (QUADAS-2) were used for quality assessment of the selected articles. Fourteen studies were identified, encompassing 9415 patients with a median age of 62 years (IQR 56.5-66.5). The majority had International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage I-II disease (76%) and endometrioid histology (89%). The 72% of patients who underwent only pelvic nodal evaluation and the 87% who underwent pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy received adjuvant treatment (p=0.44). Pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy was associated with a significant improvement in 5-year overall survival (RR=0.71, 95% CI 0.57 to 0.88, p<0.01), translating to a 41% reduction in the risk of overall death. However, no significant differences were observed in the 5-year risk of recurrence (RR=1.12, 95% CI 0.94 to 1.34, p=0.15). Additionally, patients undergoing pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy experienced a 26% increased risk of post-operative complications (RR=1.26, 95% CI 1.04 to 1.53, p=0.03) and prolonged operative times (MD=56.27, 95% CI 15.94 to 96.60, p<0.01). Pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy appears to confer a prognostic benefit in patients with intermediate- and high-risk endometrial cancer. Robust prospective studies are needed to further validate these findings and elucidate the precise role of para-aortic lymphadenectomy in the optimal management of these patients.

Pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC) with cisplatin and doxorubicin in patients with ovarian cancer: A systematic review

PIPAC consists in delivering normothermic chemotherapy solution directly into the peritoneal cavity as an aerosol under pressure. Currently PIPAC is considered as a palliative treatment for patients suffering from non-resectable peritoneal carcinomatosis. We performed a SR to assess tolerance and response of this novel method among patient with OC. We searched electronic database PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Clinical Trials.gov. We only included clinical studies reporting PIPAC with cisplatin and doxorubicin in patients with ovarian cancer. This systematic review included 4 studies. In 3 studies all patients were pretreated with cytoreductive surgery, in 1 study surgery was performed in 8/34 (23 %) patients. Mean PCI at first PIPAC procedure ranged from 16.3 to 19.6. All studies reported the proportion of patients with ascites at the first PIPAC with a pooled rate of 48,3 %. Pooled rate of CTCAE Grade 3 toxicity calculated on the total number of PIPAC was 6 % and Grade 4 was 0.9 %. One study reported two cases of small bowel perforation related or potentially related to PIPAC. On study reported a cumulative survival after 400 days of 62 % and a mean actuarial survival time of all patients who underwent PIPAC of 442 days. In another study the mean time to progression was 144 days (95 % CI 122-168 days). This systematic review demonstrated that PIPAC with cisplatin and doxorubicin appear to have a good safety profile with low toxicity and encouraging trend in terms of overall survival.

Let go of the myth: safety of indocyanine green for sentinel lymph node mapping in endometrial cancer

Sentinel lymph node mapping by intracervical indocyanine green injection is the preferred method for surgical staging in endometrial cancer. Adverse reactions to indocyanine green are extremely rare, and information about the safety of this tracer in patients with a history of other allergies, asthma, or comorbidities is limited. We aim to evaluate the rate of adverse reactions to indocyanine green injected during sentinel lymph node mapping in patients with endometrial cancer and review the etiology of such reactions. All patients with endometrial cancer undergoing sentinel lymph node mapping with indocyanine green cervical stroma injection at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota between June 2014 and December 2018 were retrospectively evaluated. Any adverse reaction occurring intra-operatively or within 7 days after surgery was identified. A thorough chart review was performed by an allergy specialist physician for any patient with an allergic-type reaction. We included 923 patients of which 565 (61.2%) had a history of allergy to antibiotics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), other medications, and/or environmental exposures. Of 490 patients who had previously received contrast media, 25 (5.1%) had a history of an adverse reaction. No immediate anaphylaxis or other allergic reactions were observed after indocyanine green injection. 10 (1.1%) patients developed a transient skin reaction within 7 days after surgery. None of these patients had a history of contrast media reaction. Based on timing and clinical/peri-operative history of affected patients, it was determined that skin reactions were likely induced by other newly prescribed medications or contact sensitivity, not administration of indocyanine green. Indocyanine green injection for sentinel lymph node mapping in patients with endometrial cancer caused no immediate/delayed anaphylactic or other severe allergic reactions. This included patients with a history of other allergies, asthma, and comorbidities. The myth of iodine's relationship to allergic reactions must be refuted to allow indocyanine green use in patients with a history of contrast media or shellfish allergy.

Characteristics and outcomes of surgically staged multiple classifier endometrial cancer

The growing adoption of molecular and genomic characterization is changing the current landscape of treatment of endometrial cancer patients. Using the surrogate molecular classification, endometrial cancer patients can be classified in four subgroups: POLE mutated (POLEmut), MMRd/MSI-H, p53 abnormal (p53abn), and no specific mutational profile (NSMP). However, some patients can harbor two or more molecular features (defined as multiple classifier). Since the rarity of this occurrence, evidence regarding multiple classifiers is still limited. Here, we described characteristics and outcomes of multiple classifiers. This is a multi-institutional retrospective study. Data of consecutive patients having 2 or more molecular features were collected. Survival was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazard methods. Charts of 72 multiple classifiers were reviewed. Median (range) follow-up was 9.8 (1.2, 37.5) months. Overall, 31 (43%) patients had POLEmut. Patients with POLEmut-MMRd/MSI-H, POLEmut-p53abn, and POLEmut-MMRd/MSI-H-p53abn were 6 (8.3%), 20 (27.8%), and 5 (6.9%), respectively. Among those 31 patients, no recurrence occurred within a median follow-up of 10.5 months (only seven (22.6%) patients had at least 2-year follow-up). The remaining 41 (56.9%) patients were diagnosed with tumors harboring both p53 and MMRd/MSI-H. Among them, four (9.8%) recurrences occurred at a median follow-up time of 8.9 months. Adjuvant therapy (other than vaginal brachytherapy) was administered in 5/31 (16%) and 25/41 (61%) patients with and without POLEmut, respectively (p < 0.001). Multiple classifiers endometrial cancer with POLEmut are characterized by good prognosis even in case of presence of MMRd/MSI-H and/or p53abn. Additional studies with long-term follow-up are needed.

Major determinants of survival in recurrent endometrial cancer—the role of secondary cytoreductive surgery: a multicenter study

The main objective of the study was to assess the influence of different clinical and therapeutic variables on the oncological outcomes of patients with endometrial cancer relapse. In particular, we evaluated the impact of cytoreductive surgery with the achievement of complete gross resection. This is a multicenter retrospective cohort study conducted in three centers in Italy and including all patients with first relapse of endometrial cancer from January 2010 to December 2021. Data from 331 women with recurrent endometrial cancer were analyzed. Secondary cytoreductive surgery was performed in 56.2% of cases (186 patients). Complete gross resection was achieved in 178 patients (95.7%). Complete gross resection conferred a statistically significant survival benefit both for post-relapse survival and post-relapse free survival (3 years post-relapse survival: 75.4% vs 56.4%, p<0.001; 3 years post-relapse free survival: 32.6% vs 26.5%, p=0.027). At multivariate Cox regression analysis, age ≥75 years, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status ≥2, the advanced-metastatic risk group, complete gross resection, and multiple site relapses were identified as independent significant predictors for post-relapse survival; regarding post-relapse free survival, only age ≥75, the high and advanced-metastatic risk groups, and complete gross resection confirmed their statistical significance. Secondary cytoreductive surgery with achievement of complete gross resection was confirmed to be an independent positive predictor for survival in patients with recurrent endometrial cancer and should be considered a valid primary treatment in the therapeutic decision-making process.

The new 2023 endometrial cancer FIGO staging system: balancing innovation with complexity

In August 2023, the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics introduced an updated staging system for endometrial cancer that integrates histopathologic and molecular characteristics (optional) of the tumor alongside with anatomic extent of the disease. This innovative approach aims to improve the prognostication of the system and the identification of treatment-relevant patient populations by more accurately stratifying patients based on tumor biology, representing a significant advancement toward personalized medicine. However, its implementation poses challenges, including the heterogeneous availability of molecular testing worldwide, and the need for further standardization and prospective validation of some of the newly introduced histopathological parameters. To address these innovations and related controversies, a meeting of physicians, including gynecologic oncologists and pathologists, was held. This article summarizes the reflections that emerged from this meeting, focusing on key elements such as the integration of histopathologic features (eg, "high-grade, aggressive histologic types," "substantial lymphovascular space invasion"), molecular classification, and the implications for global reproducibility and applicability. It also addresses the basic approach toward staging: should it offer integrated, patient-relevant information to enable accurate prognostication and inform treatment decisions or should a staging system simply provide a common language to communicate disease extent? The meeting provided an opportunity for a group of physicians to share considerations on this evolving topic. Our article highlights focal points of change in the new staging system and identifies key areas for future research, advocating for collaborative efforts to generate more robust evidence on some variables introduced in the staging system through prospective studies. By addressing these challenges, we aim to improve the applicability and effectiveness of the new International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics staging system in real-world scenarios and identify elements that may require further refinement, ultimately advancing precision medicine in endometrial cancer care.

Critical view of safety assessment in sentinel node dissection for endometrial and cervical cancer: artificial intelligence to enhance surgical safety and lymph node detection (LYSE study)

This study aims to evaluate the feasibility of video-based assessment rate of Critical Views of Safety criteria for sentinel lymph node dissection in endometrial and cervical cancer. Goal of these Critical Views of Safety is to help standardize the evaluation of surgical quality, improve the precision of sentinel lymph node identification, and lead to better patient outcomes. This international multi-center observational prospective study was conducted from April to September 2024. Surgical videos from patients with cervical and endometrial carcinoma undergoing minimally invasive sentinel lymph node dissection were collected. A total of 3 Critical Views of Safety criteria (lateral pararectal space, lateral paravesical space, internal iliac artery) were proposed based on the anatomical structures defined as mandatory to be identified before sentinel node dissection, according to previously published expert consensus. A total of 3 independent surgeons, blinded to each other's assessments, evaluated whether the proposed criteria were identifiable in the endoscopic surgical video to establish applicability (content validity) and inter-rater agreement (reliability). A total of 80 patients were enrolled, of these, 71 cases (88.8%) had videos suitable for annotation, 64 (90.1%) underwent sentinel lymph node dissection for endometrial cancer, and 7 (9.9%) for cervical cancer; the median age was 52 years (IQR 34-71) and median body mass index was 28.8 kg/m The low assessment rate of the internal iliac artery criteria should raise concerns about missing sentinel lymph nodes in the internal iliac and pre-sacral area. The assessment of such standardized safety criteria could potentially standardize the procedures, thereby improving adherence to guidelines. The introduction of the video assessment of these criteria lays the foundation for exploring the feasibility of artificial intelligence algorithms to automatically assess and document the Critical Views of Safety in surgical videos.

POLE mutations in endometrial carcinoma: Clinical and genomic landscape from a large prospective single‐center cohort

AbstractBackgroundTo date, 11 DNA polymerase epsilon (POLE) pathogenic variants have been declared “hotspot” mutations. Patients with endometrial cancer (EC) characterized by POLE hotspot mutations (POLEmut) have exceptional survival outcomes. Whereas international guidelines encourage deescalation of adjuvant treatment in early‐stage POLEmut EC, data regarding safety in POLEmut patients with unfavorable characteristics are still under investigation. On the other hand, the spread of comprehensive genome profiling programs has underscored the need to interpret POLE variants not considered to be hotspots.MethodsThis study provides a comprehensive analysis of 596 sequenced patients with EC. The genomic landscape of POLEmut EC was compared with cases harboring nonhotspot POLE mutations within the exonuclease domain. Additionally, the genomic characteristics of multiple classifiers, as well as those exhibiting unfavorable histopathological and clinical features, were examined.ResultsNo significant genomic differences were observed among patients with POLEmut EC when comparing multiple classifiers to not‐multiple classifiers or those with unfavorable clinical features. However, the tumor mutational burden differed in both comparisons, whereas the percentage of C&gt;G mutations only differed in the comparison based on clinical features. Specific POLE mutations, even if not considered to be hotspots, have genomic features comparable to POLEmut.ConclusionsThe present findings confirm the absence of significant genomic differences among POLEmut patients regardless of multiple‐classifier status or association with high‐risk clinical features. Prognostic data will be essential to elucidate the clinical significance of POLE mutations not classified as hotspots that exhibit genomic characteristics similar to those in POLEmut patients.

Impact of optimal secondary cytoreductive surgery on survival outcomes in women with recurrent endometrial carcinoma: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

AbstractBackgroundManagement of recurrent endometrial carcinoma (EC) represents a challenge. Although a complete resection of visible disease at secondary surgery (R0) is recommended, the impact of R0 on survival outcomes is unclear and pooled data are lacking.ObjectiveTo quantitatively assess the impact of R0 on survival outcomes in women with EC recurrence.Search StrategyA systematic review and meta‐analysis was performed searching eight electronic databases from their inception up to January 2024.Selection CriteriaAll peer‐reviewed studies that assessed quantitatively the impact of R0 on survival outcomes in women at first EC recurrence were included.Data Collection and AnalysisHazard ratio (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) for death of any cause and secondary recurrent or progressive disease in women with EC recurrence who underwent R0 compared to non‐optimal secondary surgical cytoreduction (R1) were pooled and assessed at both univariable and multivariable analyses.Main ResultsThree studies with 442 patients were included. At univariate analysis, in women with EC recurrence and R0 compared to women with EC recurrence and R1, pooled HR was 0.451 (95% CI: 0.319–0.638) for death from any cause, and 0.517 (95% CI: 0.298–0.895; p = 0.019) for recurrent or progressive disease.At multivariate analysis, in women with EC recurrence and R0 compared to women with EC recurrence and R1, pooled HR was 0.447 (95% CI: 0.255–0.783; p = 0.005) for death from any cause, and 0.585 (95% CI: 0.359–0.952; p = 0.031) for recurrent or progressive disease.ConclusionIn women with EC recurrence, R0 is an independent prognostic factor, decreasing the risk of death from any cause by approximatively 55%, and of recurrent or progressive disease by approximatively 40%, compared to R1.

Predictive factors for adnexal involvement in endometrial cancer FIGO stage IIIA

Understanding ovarian involvement incidence and risk factors in women with endometrial cancer may inform the decision of ovary preservation. Our retrospective study included all consecutive fully surgically staged patients with endometrial cancer who underwent primary surgery between January 2005 and November 2021, assessing the incidence of ovarian metastasis, its role as a prognostic factor for recurrence and death, and evaluated predictors of adnexal involvement. Women with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) 2009 IIIA endometrial cancer comprised 2.3% of the population (36 of 1535 included patients), 23 (63.9%) with endometrioid histology, and a median age of 57.0 years (range 47.7-66.7). A higher body mass index, post-menopausal status, endometrioid histotype, and β-catenin expression were associated with a lower risk of adnexal involvement. Conversely, dMMR phenotype, p53 expression, myometrial infiltration >50%, lymphovascular space invasion, and cervical stromal invasion were independent predictors of an increased risk of adnexal involvement. A total of 145 (9.5%) patients had adnexal involvement, with an incidence rate of 0.27/100 person-days. Overall survival for FIGO (2009) stage IIIA was 88.9%. Our study showed that ovarian preservation may be considered for younger patients with low-risk endometrial cancer (G1 and G2 tumors, absence of lymphovascular space invasion, no cervical involvement, and myometrial invasion <50%), adding a favorable predictive role to higher body mass index and high β-catenin expression.

Prognostic factors in patients with endometrial cancer with isolated lymphatic recurrence

To analyze the clinicopathological features and outcomes in patients with endometrial cancer with isolated lymphatic recurrence after lymphadenectomy, stratified by different isolated lymphatic recurrence sites and treatment approaches. We retrospectively reviewed all surgically treated patients with endometrial cancer, identifying those with recurrence. We defined primary isolated lymphatic recurrence as the first and unique evidence of recurrence in lymph node-bearing areas, without concomitant vaginal, hematogenous, or peritoneal recurrence. Isolated lymphatic recurrences were classified as pelvic, para-aortic, distant, or multiple sites. Our primary outcome was cause-specific survival after diagnosis of the recurrence. Among 4216 patients with surgically staged endometrial cancer, we identified 66 (1.6%) women with isolated lymphatic recurrence. The overall median cause-specific survival for patients with isolated lymphatic recurrence was 24 months. Although cause-specific survival was not significantly different between the four isolated lymphatic recurrence groups (p=0.21), 7 of 15 (47%) patients with isolated lymphatic recurrence in the para-aortic area were long-term survivors. At multivariate Cox regression, the absence of lymphovascular space invasion and grade 1 histology in the primary tumor were significantly associated with improved cause-specific survival. In addition, patients with isolated lymphatic recurrence who underwent surgery for recurrence (with/without other associated therapies) had improved cause-specific survival compared with patients who did not undergo surgery, also after adjusting for age. Low-grade histology and absence of lymphovascular space invasion in the primary tumor were predictors of improved prognosis in patients with endometrial cancer with isolated lymphatic recurrence. In addition, in this retrospective cohort, patients with isolated lymphatic recurrence who were selected for eradicative surgical treatment had improved cause-specific survival.

Hysteroscopic endometrial tumor localization and sentinel lymph node mapping. An upgrade of the hysteroscopic role in endometrial cancer patients

Given the growing interest in sentinel node mapping (SLN) biopsy in Endometrial Cancer (EC) patients, many efforts have been made to maximize the SLN bilateral detection rate. However, at present, no previous research assessed the potential correlation between primary EC location in the uterine cavity and SLN mapping. In this context, this study aims to investigate the possible role of intrauterine EC hysteroscopic localization in predicting SLN nodal placement. EC patients surgically treated from January 2017 to December 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. All patients underwent hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and SLN mapping. During hysteroscopy, the location of the neoplastic lesion was described as follows: uterine fundus (comprising the most cranial portion of the uterine cavity up to the tubal ostium including the cornual areas), corpus uteri (from the tubal ostium to the inner uterine orifice), and diffuse (when the tumor invades more than 50% of the uterine cavity). Three hundred ninety patients met the inclusion criteria. The tumor pattern diffused to the whole uterine cavity was statistically associated with SLN uptake on common iliac lymph nodes (OR 2.4, 95%CI 1-5.8, p = 0.05). Patients'age is an independent factor associated with SLN failure (OR: 0.95, 95%CI 0.93-0.98, p < 0.001). The study showed a statistically significant association between EC hysteroscopically spread throughout the whole uterine cavity and SLN uptake at the common iliac lymph nodes. Furthermore, patient age negatively affected the SLN detection rate.

Substantial lymph-vascular space invasion (LVSI) as predictor of distant relapse and poor prognosis in low-risk early-stage endometrial cancer

The aim of this study is to analyze the prognostic role of lymph-vascular space invasion (LVSI), evaluated in a semi-quantitative fashion on prognosis of early stage, low risk endometrial cancer (EC). We enrolled patients who underwent surgery for endometrial cancer between 2003 and 2018 in two referral cancer center. All patients had endometrioid EC, G1-G2, with myometrial invasion <50%, and no lymph-node involvement. LVSI was analyzed in a semi-quantitative way, according to a 3-tiered scoring system in absent, focal and substantial. Among 524 patients, any positive LVSI was found in 57 patients (10.9%) with focal LVSI (n=35, 6.7%) and substantial LVSI (n=22, 4.2%). Substantial LVSI was associated to higher rate of G2 (p<0.001), myometrial infiltration (p=0.002) and greater tumor dimensions (p=0.014). Patients with substantial LVSI were more likely to receive adjuvant treatment (6.6% vs. 52.6%, p<0.001). The 5-year OS was 99.5% in patients with absent LVSI and 70.6% in those with substantial LVSI (p<0.001). The 5-year disease free survival (DFS) was 93.6% in patients with absent LVSI and 56.5% in those with substantial LVSI (p<0.001). The rate of distant failures increased from 1.8% for absent LVSI to 22.7% for substantial LVSI (p=0.002). In univariate analysis substantial LVSI was the strongest predictor of poor overall survival (hazard ratio [HR]=11.9, p=0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that substantial LVSI was an independent predictive factor of both recurrence (HR=5.88, p=0.001) and distant failure (HR=10.6, p=0.006). Substantial LVSI represents the strongest independent risk factor for decreased survival and distant relapse, indicating a role for potential hematogenous dissemination.

Evaluation of the one-step nucleic acid amplification method for rapid detection of lymph node metastases in endometrial cancer: prospective, multicenter, comparative study

To evaluate the diagnostic performance of the one-step nucleic acid amplification (OSNA) method for the detection of sentinel lymph node (SLN) metastases in women with apparent early-stage endometrial cancer compared with standard ultrastaging. Prospective, multicentric, interventional study. Patients with apparent early-stage endometrial cancer who underwent primary surgical staging with SLN mapping were included. SLNs were serially sectioned with 2 mm slices perpendicular to the longest axis of the node: the odd slices were submitted to ultrastaging, whereas the even slices were submitted to the OSNA analysis. Diagnostic performance was calculated taking ultrastaging as referral standard. Three-hundred and sixteen patients with 668 SLNs were included. OSNA assay detected 22 (3.3%) positive SLNs, of which 17 (2.5%) were micrometastases and 5 (0.7%) macrometastases, whereas ultrastaging detected 24 (3.6%) positive SLNs, of which 15 (2.2%) were micrometastases and 9 (1.3%) macrometastases (p=0.48). Regarding negative SLNs, OSNA detected 646 (96.7%) negative nodes, including 8 (1.2%) isolated tumor cells, while ultrastaging detected 644 (96.4%) negative nodes with 26 (3.9%) isolated tumor cells. Specificity of OSNA was 98.4% (95% CI 97.5 to 99.4), accuracy was 96.7% (95% CI 95.4 to 98.1), sensitivity was 50% (95% CI 30.0 to 70.0), while negative predictive value was 98.1% (95% CI 97.1 to 99.2). Discordant results were found in 22 SLNs (3.3%) corresponding to 20 patients (6.3%). These were 10 (1.5%) false-positive SLNs (all micrometastases): one (0.1%) of these was a benign epithelial inclusion at ultrastaging. There were 12 (1.8%) false-negative SLNs of OSNA, of which 9 (1.3%) were micrometastases and 3 (0.5%) macrometastases. Overall, 17/668 (2.5%) benign epithelial inclusions were detected at ultrastaging. The OSNA method had high specificity and high accuracy in detecting SLN metastasis in apparent early-stage endometrial cancer. The advantage of the OSNA method could be represented as the possibility to analyze the entire lymph node thus eliminating sampling bias.

Long-term survival outcomes in high-risk endometrial cancer patients undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy alone versus lymphadenectomy

Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecologic neoplasm. To date, international guidelines recommend sentinel lymph node biopsy for low-risk neoplasms, while systematic lymphadenectomy is still considered for high-risk cases. This study aimed to compare the long-term survival of high-risk patients who were submitted to sentinel lymph node biopsy alone versus systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy. Patients with high-risk endometrial cancer according to the 2021 European Society of Gynaecological Oncology/European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology/European Society of Pathology risk classification were retrospectively analyzed. The primary aim of the study was to compare the long-term overall survival and disease-free survival of high-risk endometrial cancer patients undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy versus systematic lymphadenectomy. A supplementary post-hoc survival analysis of cases with nodal metastasis was performed to compare sentinel lymph node and lymphadenectomy survival outcomes in this subset of patients. The study enrolled 237 patients with histologically proven high-risk endometrial cancer. Patients were followed up for a median of 31 months (IQR 18-40). During the follow-up, 38 (16.0%) patients had a recurrence, and 19 (8.0%) patients died. Disease-free survival (85.2% vs 82.8%; p=0.74) and overall survival (91.3% vs 92.6%; p=0.62) were not different between the sentinel lymph node alone and lymphadenectomy groups. Furthermore, neither overall survival (96.1% vs 91.4%; p=0.43) nor disease-free survival (83.7% vs 76.4%; p=0.46) were different among sentinel lymph node alone and lymphadenectomy groups in patients with nodal metastasis. Sentinel lymph node mapping alone in high-risk endometrial cancer appears to be an oncologically safe technique over a long observational time. Systematic lymphadenectomy in this population does not offer a survival advantage.

Artificial intelligence model for enhancing the accuracy of transvaginal ultrasound in detecting endometrial cancer and endometrial atypical hyperplasia

Transvaginal ultrasound is typically the initial diagnostic approach in patients with postmenopausal bleeding for detecting endometrial atypical hyperplasia/cancer. Although transvaginal ultrasound demonstrates notable sensitivity, its specificity remains limited. The objective of this study was to enhance the diagnostic accuracy of transvaginal ultrasound through the integration of artificial intelligence. By using transvaginal ultrasound images, we aimed to develop an artificial intelligence based automated segmentation model and an artificial intelligence based classifier model. Patients with postmenopausal bleeding undergoing transvaginal ultrasound and endometrial sampling at Mayo Clinic between 2016 and 2021 were retrospectively included. Manual segmentation of images was performed by four physicians (readers). Patients were classified into cohort A (atypical hyperplasia/cancer) and cohort B (benign) based on the pathologic report of endometrial sampling. A fully automated segmentation model was developed, and the performance of the model in correctly identifying the endometrium was compared with physician made segmentation using similarity metrics. To develop the classifier model, radiomic features were calculated from the manually segmented regions-of-interest. These features were used to train a wide range of machine learning based classifiers. The top performing machine learning classifier was evaluated using a threefold approach, and diagnostic accuracy was assessed through the F1 score and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC-ROC). 302 patients were included. Automated segmentation-reader agreement was 0.79±0.21 using the Dice coefficient. For the classification task, 92 radiomic features related to pixel texture/shape/intensity were found to be significantly different between cohort A and B. The threefold evaluation of the top performing classifier model showed an AUC-ROC of 0.90 (range 0.88-0.92) on the validation set and 0.88 (range 0.86-0.91) on the hold-out test set. Sensitivity and specificity were 0.87 (range 0.77-0.94) and 0.86 (range 0.81-0.94), respectively. We trained an artificial intelligence based algorithm to differentiate endometrial atypical hyperplasia/cancer from benign conditions on transvaginal ultrasound images in a population of patients with postmenopausal bleeding.

Molecular classification of endometrial carcinoma on endometrial biopsy: an early prognostic value to guide personalized treatment

Molecular features are essential for estimating the risk of recurrence and impacting overall survival in patients with endometrial cancer. Additionally, the surgical procedure itself could be personalized based on the molecular characteristics of the tumor. This study aims to assess the feasibility of obtaining reliable molecular classification status from biopsy specimens collected during hysteroscopy to better modulate the appropriate surgical treatment. This monocentric, retrospective, observational study was conducted on 106 patients who underwent a biopsy procedure followed by radical surgery for endometrial cancer, with concurrent molecular investigation. The molecular classification was determined through immunohistochemical staining for p53 and mismatch repair proteins, along with gene sequencing for POLE. Overall, 106 patients underwent molecular investigation, which was finally achieved on 99 patients (93.4%). Among these, the molecular analysis was conducted in 71 patients (67%) on the pre-operative endometrial biopsy and on the final uterine specimen in 28 patients (26.4%). Most of the endometrial biopsies were performed using Bettocchi hysteroscopy (66%). Molecular analysis was not possible in seven patients (6.6%), with six cases due to sample inadequacy and one case attributed to intra-mucosal carcinoma. The molecular results showed that the copy number low sub-group was the most common, and five cases of 'multiple classifiers' were observed in the low-risk category. Our experience in obtaining molecular information from biopsy samples underscores the feasibility and efficacy of this technique, even in small tissue samples. This capability helps define the prognostic group of patients, facilitates timely decision-making, and develops a personalized strategy for each patient.

Optimizing patient selection for secondary cytoreductive surgery in recurrent endometrial cancer

This retrospective, multicenter, observational study aimed to refine patient selection criteria for secondary cytoreductive surgery in recurrent endometrial cancer. The objective was to identify preoperative predictors of complete cytoreduction, assess surgical complexity, and propose a preoperative predictive scoring system to identify suitable candidates for secondary cytoreductive surgery. Data from 331 women with recurrent endometrial cancer were analyzed across three Italian centers from January 2010 to December 2021. Patients were categorized based on treatment received (medical treatment, diagnostic laparoscopy/examination under anesthesia, or secondary cytoreductive surgery). Preoperative predictors, surgical complexity, complications, and a predictive scoring system were assessed. Logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic analysis were used for statistical evaluation. Of the cohort, 56.2% underwent debulking surgery, 17.2% had diagnostic laparoscopy, and 26.6% received medical treatment. Patients undergoing secondary cytoreductive surgery were younger, with a lower body mass index, better performance status, and fewer comorbidities. Single site locoregional relapse was common in secondary cytoreductive surgery patients. Age <65 years, single site relapse, lymph node, and hematogenous relapse were independent predictors of complete cytoreduction. A predictive scoring system demonstrated a clear relationship between the score and the likelihood of complete cytoreduction. This study identified age <65 years, single site recurrence, as well as nodal and hematogenous recurrence, as predictive factors for achieving optimal cytoreduction. A predictive scoring system incorporating these factors has been proposed to identify optimal candidates for secondary cytoreductive surgery in recurrent endometrial cancer. The scoring system showed promising predictive accuracy and could aid in refining the decision making process, ensuring appropriate patient selection for secondary cytoreductive surgery. Further prospective studies are warranted to validate and enhance the predictive model.

How deep is too deep? Assessing myometrial invasion as a predictor of distant recurrence in stage I endometrioid endometrial cancer

The goal of this study was to evaluate the depth of myometrial invasion as a predictor of distant recurrence in patients with node-negative stage IB endometrioid endometrial cancer. A retrospective multicenter study, including surgically staged endometrial cancer patients at Mayo Clinic, Rochester (MN, USA) between January 1999 and December 2017, and Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli (Rome, Italy) between March 2002 and March 2017, was conducted. Patients without lymph node assessment were excluded. The follow-up was restricted to the first 5 years following surgery. Recurrence-free survival was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Cox proportional hazards models were fit to evaluate the association of clinical and pathologic characteristics with the risk of recurrence. Of 386 patients, the mean (SD) depth of myometrial invasion was 70.4 (13.2)%. We identified 51 recurrences (14 isolated vaginal, 37 non-vaginal); the median follow-up of the remaining patients was 4.5 (IQR 2.3-7.0) years. At univariate analysis, the risk of non-vaginal recurrence increased by 64% (95% CI 1.28 to 2.12) for every 10-unit increase in the depth of myometrial invasion. International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) grade and myometrial invasion were independent predictors of non-vaginal recurrence. The 5-year non-vaginal recurrence-free survival was 95.2% (95% CI 92.0% to 98.6%), 84.0% (95% CI 76.6% to 92.1%), and 67.1% (95% CI 54.2% to 83.0%) for subsets of patients with myometrial invasion <71% (n=207), myometrial invasion ≥71% and grade 1-2 (n=132), and myometrial invasion ≥71% and grade 3 (n=47), respectively. A total of 256 (66.3%) patients received either vaginal brachytherapy only or no adjuvant therapy. Patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy, regardless of receipt of external beam radiotherapy or vaginal brachytherapy, had an approximately 70% lower risk of any recurrence (HR adjusted for age, grade, myometrial invasion 0.31, 95% CI 0.12 to 0.85) and of non-vaginal recurrence (adjusted HR 0.32, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.99). The invasion of the outer third of the myometrium and histologic grade were found to be independent predictors of distant recurrence among patients with endometrioid, node-negative stage IB endometrial cancer. Future studies should investigate if systemic adjuvant therapy for patients with myometrial invasion of the outer third would improve outcomes.

Endometrial cancer with positive sentinel lymph nodes: pathologic characteristics of metastases as predictors of extent of lymphatic dissemination and prognosis

To assess predictors of extensive lymph node dissemination and non-vaginal recurrence in patients with endometrial cancer with positive sentinel lymph nodes (SLNs). Patients with endometrial cancer who underwent primary surgery with SLN mapping and had at least one positive node between October 2013 and May 2019 were included. Positive SLNs were reviewed, and cases were classified according to the location of the metastasis (extracapsular vs intracapsular), and the size of the largest SLN metastasis (isolated tumor cells, micrometastasis, macrometastasis). Associations were assessed based on fitting logistic regression models and Cox proportional hazards models. A total of 103 patients met the inclusion criteria: including 36 (34.9%) with isolated tumor cells, 27 (26.2%) with micrometastasis, and 40 (38.8%) with macrometastasis. Notably, 71.4% of patients exhibiting extracapsular SLN metastases had multiple positive SLNs (p=0.008). Extracapsular invasion (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 5.81, 95% CI 1.4 to 23.6) and age (aOR=1.8, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.0) emerged as independent predictors of multiple positive SLNs. Among the 38 patients who underwent a backup pelvic lymphadenectomy, 18 (47.4%) presented with positive pelvic non-SLNs, a phenomenon more prevalent in patients with macrometastasis (p=0.004).Independent predictors of non-vaginal recurrence included SLN macrometastasis (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 3.3, 95% CI 1.3 to 8.3), non-endometrioid histology (aHR=3.7, 95% CI 1.5 to 9.3), and cervical stromal invasion (aHR=5.5, 95% CI 2.0 to 14.9). Among the 34 patients with isolated tumor cells and endometrioid histology, 3 (9%) experienced a recurrence, all of whom had not received any adjuvant chemotherapy or external beam radiotherapy. Patients with positive SLN macrometastasis are independently associated with extensive lymphatic dissemination and distant recurrences. The risk of multiple positive SLNs increases with the extracapsular location of the SLN metastasis and with age. Independent uterine pathologic predictors of non-vaginal recurrence are non-endometrioid histology and cervical stromal invasion.

Predicting the Risk of nOdal disease with histological and Molecular features in Endometrial cancer: the prospective PROME trial

To assess the role of histopathological and molecular features in predicting the risk of nodal metastases in apparent early-stage endometrial cancer patients undergoing sentinel node mapping. This is a prospective trial. Consecutive patients with apparent early-stage endometrial cancer, undergoing laparoscopic hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and sentinel node mapping, were enrolled. Histological and molecular features were used to predict the node positivity. Charts of 223 apparent early-stage endometrial cancer patients were included in this study. Four (1.8%) patients were excluded from this study due to the lack of data about molecular features. Additionally, nine (4%) patients did not meet the inclusion criteria (due to the presence of peritoneal carcinomatosis or bulky nodes (the presence of p53 abnormality correlated with the presence of advanced stage disease (p<0.001)). The study population included 178 (84.8%) and 32 (15.2%) patients with endometrioid and non-endometrioid endometrial cancer, respectively. According to pathological uterine risk factors, 93 (44.3%), 45 (21.4%), 40 (19.1%), and 32 (15.2%) were classified as low, intermediate, intermediate-high, and high-risk, respectively. Using the surrogate molecular classification, 10 (4.8%), 42 (20%), 57 (27.1%), and 101 (48.1%) were included in the POLE mutated, p53 abnormal, MMRd/MSI-H, and NSMP, respectively. Overall, 41 (19.5%) patients were detected with positive nodes. Molecular features were not associated with the risk of having nodal metastases (OR 1.03, 95% CI 0.21 to 5.05, p=0.969 for Our data suggest that molecular classification does not seem useful to tailor the need of nodal dissection in apparent early-stage endometrial cancer. p53 abnormality predicts the risk of having advanced disease at presentation. Further external validation is needed. NCT05793333.

Hysterectomy alone vs. hysterectomy plus sentinel node mapping in endometrial cancer: Perioperative and long-term results from a propensity-score based study

To compare outcomes after hysterectomy and hysterectomy plus sentinel node mapping (SNM) in endometrial cancer (EC) patients. This is a retrospective study, collecting data of EC patients treated between 2006 and 2016 in nine referral centers. The study population included 398 (69.5%) and 174 (30.5%) patients having hysterectomy and hysterectomy plus SNM. As the results of the adoption of a propensity-score matched analysis, we selected two homogeneous cohort of patients (150 having hysterectomy only vs. 150 having hysterectomy plus SNM). The SNM group had a longer operative time, but did not correlate with length of hospital stay and estimated blood loss. Overall severe complication rates were similar between groups (0.7% in the hysterectomy group vs. 1.3% in the hysterectomy plus SNM group; p = 0.561). No lymphatic-specific complication occurred. Overall, 12.6% of patients having SNM were diagnosed with disease harboring in their lymph nodes. Adjuvant therapy administration rate was similar between groups. Considering patients having SNM, 4% of patients received adjuvant therapy on the basis of nodal status alone; all the other patients received adjuvant therapy also on the basis of uterine risk factors. Five-year disease-free (p = 0.720) and overall (p = 0.632) survival was not influenced by surgical approach. Hysterectomy (with or without SNM) is a safe and effective method for managing EC patients. Potentially, these data support the omission of side specific lymphadenectomy in case of unsuccessful mapping. Further evidence is warranted in to confirm the role SNM in the era of molecular/genomic profiling.

Genome tumor profiling in endometrial cancer and clinical relevance in endometrial cancer management: a retrospective single-center experience

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) analysis has become an essential tool for endometrial carcinoma management. Moreover, molecular-driven therapies play an increasingly remarkable role in the era of precision oncology. This study aims to determine the clinical relevance of NGS testing in endometrial carcinoma management by analyzing the clinical benefit of NGS-driven targeted therapies. A single-center retrospective study was conducted on 25 endometrial carcinoma patients who underwent Foundation Medicine CDx assay at Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli, IRCCS (Rome, Italy). Tumor samples were analyzed by Foundation One CDx. A descriptive analysis of tumor genome profiles was performed. Assessment of clinical benefit according to RECIST 1.1 criteria was analyzed for patients who received a tailored treatment according to actionable targets identified by NGS testing. Out of 25 endometrial carcinoma patients, 11 received targeted therapy. One patient was excluded from the clinical benefit assessment because of COVID-19-related death 1 month after starting the treatment. Eight of the remaining 10 patients benefited from targeted therapies, with an overall clinical benefit rate of 80%. A targeted agent belonging to the PI3K pathway was given to seven patients, with evidence of three partial responses (42.9%), three stable diseases (42.9%), and one progressive disease (14.2%) according to RECIST 1.1 criteria. One complete response (33.3%), one stable disease (33.3%), and one progressive disease (33.3%) were observed in the three patients treated with poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors according to their homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) status. This study highlights the importance of characterizing the mutation profile of patient tumors through NGS. Our findings suggest a clinical benefit of using NGS-driven targeted therapies in endometrial carcinoma patients. However, this personalized approach could benefit the health system in terms of cost-effectiveness by reducing the costs of inappropriate, ineffective, and often expensive treatments.

Further refining 2020 ESGO/ESTRO/ESP molecular risk classes in patients with early‐stage endometrial cancer: A propensity score–matched analysis

BackgroundThe integration of molecular features with clinicopathological findings in endometrial cancer classification seems to be able to significantly refine risk assessment. Nevertheless, clinical management remains challenging, and different therapeutic options are available for each class. Further prognostic characterization of the subgroups within each risk class could be helpful in the decision‐making process.MethodsThis study evaluated the role of the 2020 European Society of Gynaecological Oncology (ESGO)/European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO)/European Society of Pathology (ESP) risk assessment system and the three prognostic profiles adopted in the PORTEC‐4a trial in predicting disease‐free and overall survival in a retrospective study cohort of patients with early‐stage endometrial cancer. Patients were selected according to a 1:2 propensity score matching analysis. Moreover, the sequencing of 29 genes was undertaken for tumor samples.ResultsThe study included 137 patients. No differences in disease‐free or overall survival at 5 years were observed among the 2020 ESGO/ESTRO/ESP risk classes without molecular features (p = .766 and p = .176, respectively). Once molecular features were integrated, the probability of overall survival was significantly different (p = .011). When the three prognostic profiles were applied, the probability of recurrence had a p value of .097, and significant differences were observed in overall survival (p = .004). Among patients experiencing recurrence, 17.6% showed mutations in BRCA1/2, RAD50, BRIP1, and XRCC2, whereas 22.5% had PD‐L1–positive expression and an MUTYH mutation.ConclusionsFurther stratification within each risk class according to the most relevant prognostic features could better define the prognosis of patients with early‐stage endometrial cancer. Nearly half of the patients who experienced recurrence showed a targetable molecular alteration for which dedicated trials should be encouraged.

Laparoscopic vs. robotic-assisted laparoscopy in endometrial cancer staging: large retrospective single-institution study

The aim of this study is to analyze and draw the potential differences between the robotic-assisted surgery (RS) and the laparoscopy (LPS) in endometrial cancer staging. In this single-institution retrospective study we enrolled 1,221 consecutive clinical stage I-III endometrial cancer patients undergone minimally invasive surgical staging. We compared patients treated by LPS and by RS, on the basis of perioperative and oncological outcomes (disease-free survival [DFS] and overall survival [OS]). A sub-analysis of the high-risk endometrial cancer population was performed in the 2 cohorts. The 2 cohorts (766 treated by LPS and 455 by RS) were homogeneous in terms of perioperative and pathological data. We recorded differences in number of relapse/progression (11.7% in LPS vs. 7% in RS, p=0.008) and in number of deaths (9.8% in LPS vs. 4.8% in RS, p=0.002). Whereas, univariate and multivariate analyses according to DFS and OS confirmed that the surgical approach did not influence the DFS or the OS. In the multivariable analysis the association of the age and grading was significant for DFS and OS. In the sub-analysis of the 426 high risk EC patients (280 in LPS and 146 in RS) the univariate and the multivariate confirmed the influence of the age in DFS and OS, independently of the minimally invasive approach. In our large retrospective analysis, we confirmed that the RS and LPS have similar efficacy and safety for endometrial cancer staging also for the high-risk endometrial cancer patients.

In search for biomarkers and potential drug targets for uterine serous endometrial cancer

Abstract Objective Serous endometrial cancer (USC) is a challenging malignancy associated with metastasis, recurrence and poor outcome. To identify clinically relevant prognostic biomarkers, we focused on a panel of proteins selected after a comprehensive literature review, for tumour profiling of a homogeneous cohort of USC patients. Methods Protein levels and localization were assessed by immunohistochemistry analysis in 36 hysterectomy samples. Tissue sections were stained with the following antibodies: Aurora A, phospho (T288) Aurora A, BRCA1, CHK1, CIP2A, Cyclin B1, Cyclin E, E2F-1, phospho (S364) E2F-1, FBXW7, FOXM1, phospho (S9) GSK3Beta, PLK1, phospho (T210) PLK1, PPP2R1B, p73, RAD51. Each marker was evaluated as a continuously-scaled variable for association with disease progression and death, using Cox proportional hazards models. The sample consisted of 36 patients with USC, half with stage III or IV disease. Results Results showed that higher CHK1 (Checkpoint kinase 1) expression was associated with a decreased risk of progression and death, after adjusting for stage. Interestingly, analysis of a TCGA data set of 109 USC patients corroborates our results showing a favourable prognostic role of CHEK1 after adjusting for stage. Higher FBXW7 (F-box and WD repeat domain containing 7) expression and higher cytoplasmic expression of PPP2R1B (Protein Phosphatase 2 A, Scaffold Subunit Abeta) were each associated with a decreased risk of progression, after adjusting for stage. Conclusions In conclusion, results from the present study identify new clinically relevant biomarkers and potential drug targets for uterine serous endometrial cancer.

Risk reducing surgery with peritoneal staging in BRCA1-2 mutation carriers. A prospective study

International guidelines recommend risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) in BRCA1-2 mutations carriers to decrease ovarian cancer occurrence. In this prospective study, we describe the incidence of occult malignancies and the surgical outcomes in asymptomatic BRCA mutation carriers submitted to RRSO. Data on BRCA1-2 carriers undergoing RRSO with peritoneal washing and peritoneal/omental biopsies (PeS), between January 2019 until March 2021, were prospectively collected. A total of 132 patients were enrolled: 74 BRCA1 and 58 BRCA2 mutation carriers. 31.1% women underwent RRSO and PeS (16.2% of BRCA1 and 50% of BRCA2 carriers), while 68.9% patients were submitted also to concomitant hysterectomy. Almost all the procedures (99.2%) were performed by minimally invasive surgery. Postoperative complications occurred in twelve patients (9.1%): 10 in the concomitant hysterectomy group and two complications in the RRSO group. At the final pathological examination, 6 (4.5%) occult carcinomas were diagnosed: 3 fallopian tube carcinomas, one ovarian carcinoma and two serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STICs), with negative PeS. Median age of occult carcinomas patients at RRSO was 54 (range: 48-79) years. The mean follow up was 20 (range: 7-34) months. During the follow up, no primary peritoneal cancer has been diagnosed. Occult pathologic findings in RRSO occurred in 4.5% (3% invasive carcinomas, STIC 1.5%) among our patients. The routine use of peritoneal biopsies does not improve the detection of occult malignancies. Our data confirm the importance of timely performing RRSO in BRCA1-2 carriers.

Clinical impact of surgical energy device (Caiman®) IN elderly patients with Endometrial Cancer (protocol ID: Cineca)

To investigate the clinical performance of the Caiman® energy device in class A radical laparoscopic hysterectomy (RLH) according to Querleu-Morrow classification, combined with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) and pelvic lymph node assessment in elderly patients with early-stage endometrial cancer (EC), specifically focusing on hemostatic effectiveness and safety. Single-institution, prospective observational study. Gynecologic Oncology Unit, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Rome, Italy. Forty-three women over 65 years with FIGO stage IA or IB endometrioid EC were enrolled from September 2021 to August 2023. Use of Caiman® energy device in RLH combined with BSO and pelvic lymph node assessment in elderly patients. The primary endpoint was operative time, with secondary endpoints including perioperative outcomes and postoperative complications. Results demonstrated a median surgical time of 135 min, with no significant intraoperative complications attributed to the Caiman® device. Postoperative complications were minimal, with no severe complications (Grade 4 or 5) and a median hospital stay of two days. The study highlights the advantages of the Caiman® in enhancing surgical efficiency while minimizing risks for elderly patients, suggesting its potential for improving resource allocation and patient outcomes in oncologic surgery. The findings of this study suggest the feasibility of using the Caiman® device for surgical procedures in elderly patients with early-stage endometrial cancer. Future prospective randomized trials are needed to establish its efficacy compared to traditional surgical methods.

The exciting journey of progress: Exploring FIGO 2023 staging for endometrial cancer at a leading ESGO institution

The 2023 FIGO staging of endometrial cancer integrates tumor grade and histology along with molecular features that recognize the prognostic significance of p53 and POLE mutations, accounting for potential conflicts such as lymphovascular space invasion and subserosal invasion. In this single-institution retrospective study, data were collected on 229 endometrial cancer patients from January 2020 to September 2024 and re-stage them according to FIGO 2023 criteria. From FIGO stage 2009 IA, 70 patients do not cross stage (21 are FIGO 2023 IA1 and 49 IA2), 8 patients are upgraded to FIGO IC because of aggressive histotype; 1 is upstaged because of substantial LVSI, and 12 because of aggressive myoinfiltrating tumors (23 % of upstaging). From FIGO 2009 stage IB 34 patients remain in FIGO 2023 IB, while 5 become stage IIB (LVSI) and 27 IIC (aggressive myoinfiltrating), for a total of 32 upstages (48 % of upstaging). Within FIGO 2009 stage II, no proper upstage was possible. We observed a statistical correlation between stages and BMI, as well as between stages and age, for both FIGO 2009 (p = 0.009 and p < 0.001 respectively) and FIGO 2023 (p = 0.002 and p = 0.003 respectively) classifications. Additionally, a correlation was found between tumor grade and BMI (p = 0.02). The FIGO 2023 staging system is gaining importance as recent studies highlight the role of molecular classification in prognosis and personalized therapy. Updating our study's follow-up data will clarify its impact in clinical practice.

Fertility-sparing approach for uterine smooth muscle tumors of uncertain malignant potential

Uterine smooth muscle tumors of uncertain malignant potential (STUMP) are a category of tumors that present diagnostic/therapeutic challenges since they cannot be assigned to either a benign or a malignant entity. Hysterectomy is the mainstay of treatment of STUMP. However, in most cases, STUMPs represent an incidental diagnosis following myomectomy. The optimal management of young women having an incidental diagnosis of STUMP following myomectomy is unclear. Only a few experiences are reported. This review focuses on the fertility-sparing treatment of STUMPs. This is a systematic review of studies comparing outcomes of patients undergoing hysterectomy and myomectomy. For this review, we included studies reporting outcomes of patients with STUMPs undergoing myomectomy. Studies reporting data only on radical treatment for STUMPs or focusing on conservative management of other uterine malignancies (including leiomyosarcoma) were excluded. Pooled data of 327 patients (from 9 retrospective studies) were evaluated. Overall, the study included 159 (48.6%) and 168 (51.4%) patients who had myomectomy and hysterectomy, respectively. No differences in recurrence rates were observed after myomectomy and hysterectomy (13.2% vs 9.5%, OR 0.69, 95% CI 0.35 to 1.38, p = .30), after a median follow-up of 44 and 48 months, respectively. Patients treated with myomectomy were more likely to develop STUMP recurrences than patients treated with hysterectomy (11.9% vs 4.1%, OR 2.38, 95% CI 1.04 to 5.44, p = .046). Among 103 patients desiring to conceive, 40 (38.8%) patients achieved at least 1 pregnancy. Pregnancy was not associated with an increased risk of recurrence. These cumulative data suggest that myomectomy might be considered a safe and effective alternative for women who wish to preserve their childbearing potential. Centralization, pathology review based on clinic-pathologic and molecular integration, and multidisciplinary discussion in referral centers are of paramount importance. Multicenter prospective registries are needed.

Minimally invasive simple hysterectomy in low-risk cervical cancer: a single-arm trial with stopping rules (ENGOT-cx23/MITO/LASH trial)

The oncologic safety of minimally invasive simple hysterectomy in low-risk cervical cancer has not been explored by an adequately powered clinical trial. This study aims to evaluate whether minimally invasive simple hysterectomy affects disease-free survival in low-risk early-stage cervical cancer. Minimally invasive simple hysterectomy represents an oncologically safe approach in selected patients with low-risk cervical cancer. This is a single-arm trial with stopping rules. All patients must undergo cervical conization. Patients with clear conization margins or absence of residual macroscopic disease at imaging after conization (re-conization is mandatory if these criteria are not met) are submitted to minimally invasive (laparoscopy or robot-assisted laparoscopy) simple hysterectomy with sentinel lymph node biopsy algorithm. Adjuvant therapy is given in case of tumor-involved surgical margins, and/or metastatic lymph nodes, and/or substantial lymphovascular space invasion with depth of stromal infiltration >2/3 (or tumor-free distance ≤3 mm). The major inclusion criteria are: squamous cell carcinoma, human papillomavirus-related adenocarcinoma, adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix; International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics 2018 stage IA2-IB1 (≤2 cm) with depth of infiltration ≤10 mm on conization specimen; International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics 2018 stage IA2-IB1 (≤2 cm) with depth of infiltration ≤50% at pre-conization magnetic resonance imaging scan or "expert" ultrasound scan. Women are not eligible if they have evidence of metastatic disease, contra-indications to surgery and/or lymph node assessment, or fertility sparing desire. The primary end point is 3-year disease-free survival of patients who undergo minimally invasive simple hysterectomy. A sample size of 974 patients will give a power of 80% at a significance level of 2.5% (1-sided) to reject the null hypothesis of a 3-year recurrence rate of 2.4%, assuming a 3-year recurrence rate of 1.2%. A maximum of 14 recurrences at 3 years should be observed to reject the null hypothesis. A stopping rule based on the number of recurrences observed at different timepoints will be implemented to avoid a higher recurrence rate with the study procedure. The trial will also be stopped if no recurrences are observed in the first 400 patients followed up for 2 years. The enrolment will last 60 months. After the surgery, the follow-up time will be ≥3 years. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT06416748) and as ENGOT/MITO trial (ENGOT-cx23).

Effects of niraparib dose reduction on short-term outcomes in ovarian cancer patients

Despite the individualized starting dose for maintenance therapy in ovarian cancer, the niraparib dose reduction rate remains high. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of niraparib dose reduction on progression-free survival in newly diagnosed primary advanced ovarian cancer and recurrent ovarian cancer patients. We also aimed to compare the reduction rates and the safety of niraparib on primary and relapse groups, and identify which factors may predict dose reduction. Patients with primary or recurrent ovarian cancer in maintenance who received niraparib between 2019 and 2022 were retrospectively evaluated. Niraparib dosing was based on individualized starting dose of 300 or 200 mg/day. The impact of niraparib dose reductions was focused on patients treated with 200 or 100 mg in both groups. Reduction rates, adverse events and predictive factors of reduction were assessed in each study group. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival in primary and relapse groups; the secondary endpoints were the reduction rates, the safety and tolerability of niraparib in both groups. Of 215 patients identified, 124 (57.7%) primary and 91 (42.3%) recurrent ovarian cancer patients were included. The majority of patients started niraparib at 200 mg/day (92.7% primary and 80.2% relapse group); dose reductions from 300 or 200 mg/day to 200 or 100 mg/day occurred more frequently within cycles 1-3 (67% primary and 45% relapse group, p=0.001). Grade≥3 adverse events were lower in the relapse group (54.8% primary and 35.1% relapse, p=0.001). In both groups, dose modifications over the treatment did not significantly impair median progression-free survival. Univariate and multivariate analysis demonstrated that weight and platinum-doublets were possible risk factors for dose reduction. Niraparib dose reduction occurs in almost half of patients within cycles 1-3, although it is significantly more common in the first-line setting. Survival outcomes seem not to be impaired by dose reduction.

Low-grade versus high-grade serous ovarian cancer: comparison of surgical outcomes after secondary cytoreductive surgery

Retrospective series have shown secondary cytoreductive surgery improves oncological outcomes in recurrent low-grade serous ovarian cancer. We aim to compare surgical procedures and complications between patients with low-grade and high-grade recurrent serous ovarian cancer. This retrospective single-institution study includes patients with recurrent low-grade and high-grade serous ovarian cancer undergoing surgery between January 2012 to December 2021. Patients were propensity matched 1:3 for residual tumor at first surgery, presence of ascites and performance status. Complexity of surgery and postoperative complications were analyzed. A total of 116 patients undergoing secondary cytoreductive surgery were included with 29 patients (25%) having low-grade ovarian cancer. The median age of the patients was 54 years (range: 19-85) and 57 years (range: 29-78) in low-grade and high-grade ovarian cancer, respectively (p=0.13). Stages III/IV at diagnosis were more frequent in patients with high-grade ovarian cancers (p<0.001). Peritoneal involvement was higher in low-grade compared with high-grade ovarian cancer as shown by the higher rate of diaphragmatic (41.4% vs 21.8%, p=0.05), abdominal wall (41.4% vs 18.4%, p=0.02) and pelvic (51.7% vs 21.8%, p=0.01) peritonectomy. Multiple bowel resections were higher in low-grade ovarian cancer (24.1% vs 8.0%, p=0.04), while high-grade ovarian cancer had a higher rate of nodal recurrences (73.2%% vs 37.9%, p=0.03). Overall, surgical complexity was higher in low-grade ovarian cancer (58.6% vs 36.8%; p=0.05), with higher median estimated blood loss (400 vs 200 mL; p=0.01) compared with high-grade. Complete cytoreduction was achieved in 26 patients (89.7%) with low-grade and 84 (96.6%) with high-grade (p=0.16) ovarian cancer, with no significant differences in postoperative complications. Secondary cytoreductive surgery in low-grade serous ovarian cancer patients was associated with higher complexity, multiple bowel resections, and higher median estimated blood loss than in high-grade serous ovarian cancer. The comparable rate of postoperative complications suggests that secondary cytoreductive surgery in this group of patients is feasible in expert centers.

Circulating tumor DNA as a biomarker for predicting progression-free survival and overall survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is emerging as a potential prognostic biomarker in multiple tumor types. However, despite the many studies available on small series of patients with ovarian cancer, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis is lacking. The objective of this study was to determine the association of ctDNA with progression-free-survival and overall survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. An electronic search was conducted using PubMed (MEDLINE), Embase, CENTRAL (Cochrane Library), and CINAHL-Complete from January 2000 to September 15, 2023. To be included in the analysis the studies had to meet the following pre-specified inclusion criteria: (1) evaluable ctDNA; (2) progression-free-survival and overall survival reported as hazard ratio (HR); and (3) the patient population had epithelial ovarian cancer at the time of ctDNA detection. We evaluated the association of ctDNA with progression-free survival and overall survival. Secondary outcomes focused on sub-group analysis of genomic alterations and international Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage. A total of 26 studies reporting on 1696 patients with epithelial ovarian cancer were included. The overall concordance rate between plasma-based and tissue-based analyses was approximately 62%. We found that a high level of ctDNA in epithelial ovarian cancer was associated with worse progression-free survival (HR 5.31, 95% CI 2.14 to 13.17, p<0.001) and overall survival (HR 2.98, 95% CI 1.86 to 4.76, p<0.0001). The sub-group analysis showed a greater than threefold increase in the risk of relapse in patients with positive HOXA9 meth-ctDNA (HR 3.84, 95% CI 1.57 to 9.41, p=0.003). ctDNA was significantly associated with worse progression-free survival and overall survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. Further prospective studies are needed. CRD42023469390.

Mirvetuximab soravtansine-gynx: first antibody/antigen-drug conjugate (ADC) in advanced or recurrent ovarian cancer

Mirvetuximab soravtansine-gynx (MIRV) is a conjugate of a folate receptor alpha (FRα)-directed antibody and the maytansinoid microtubule inhibitor, DM4. Accumulating pre-clinical and clinical data supported the safety and anti-tumor activity of MIRV in tumors expressing FRα. In 2017, a phase I expansion study reported the first experience of MIRV in FRα-positive platinum-resistant ovarian cancer with promising results. However, the phase III FORWARD I study failed to demonstrate a significant benefit of MIRV in FRα-positive tumors. On the basis of the data reported from this latter study, MIRV was then explored in the FRα-high population only and using a different folate receptor assay. The phase II SORAYA trial supported the adoption of MIRV in this setting. Hence, the US Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval of MIRV for patients with FRα-positive platinum-resistant epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer who have received 1-3 prior systemic treatment regimens. Moreover, the results of the MIRASOL trial showed a significant reduction in the risk of tumor progression or death among patients treated with MIRV versus chemotherapy. VENTANA FOLR1 (FOLR-2.1) was approved as a companion diagnostic test to identify FRα patients. MIRV appears to be a significant asset in managing advanced or recurrent ovarian cancer. Further trials are needed to confirm these promising results, even in the neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and maintenance settings.

The role of diagnostic laparoscopy in locally advanced cervical cancer staging

Peritoneal involvement may be overlooked in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC). This may lead to underestimation of prognosis and to undertreatment limited to locoregional disease locations. However, staging laparoscopy in LACC is not routinely performed. The primary aim of this study was to determine the proportion of peritoneal metastasis by laparoscopy and the factors associated with peritoneal metastasis in patients with LACC. Secondary aims were to evaluate the performance of staging imaging in detecting peritoneal disease and the prognosis of patients with peritoneal metastasis. Retrospective single-institution study including consecutive patients with newly diagnosed LACC (FIGO 2018 stage IB3 and IIA2-IVA) between 06/2015 and 06/2020. All women underwent PET/CT scan, MRI scan and diagnostic laparoscopy at the time of examination under anesthesia (EUA), as part of cervical cancer staging. Peritoneal metastasis was histologically confirmed in all cases. 251 patients were included. 33 (13.2 %) had peritoneal metastasis. The treatment plan was changed for 28/33 (84.8 %) patients with peritoneal metastasis (11.1 % of the entire LACC cohort). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that grade 3 (OR:1.572, 95%CI:1.021-2.419; p = 0.040) and AJCC stage T3-4 (OR:3.435, 95%CI:1.482-7.960; p = 0.004) were variables associated with increased risk of peritoneal metastasis. Sensitivity of PET/CT-scan and MRI-scan in detecting peritoneal metastasis was 4.5 % (95%CI:0.1-22.8) and 13.8 % (95%CI:3.9-31.7), respectively. Peritoneal metastasis was independently associated with worse PFS and OS (HR:3.008, 95%CI:1.779-5.087, p < 0.001 and HR:4.078, 95%CI:2.232-7.451; p < 0.001, respectively). LACC patients with grade 3 histology and/or AJCC stage T3-4 had high-risk of peritoneal metastasis and diagnostic laparoscopy might be considered as part of cervical cancer staging in these patients. Peritoneal metastasis was an independent factor associated with worse PFS and OS.

Role of minimally invasive secondary cytoreduction in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer

Retrospective series have shown minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery is a feasible approach in selected cases of recurrent ovarian cancer. However, no predictors of minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery feasibility are currently available. This study aims to identify predictive factors of minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery feasibility and to compare perioperative and survival outcomes in a matched series of recurrent ovarian cancer patients who underwent secondary cytoreduction via an open or minimally invasive surgical approach. We retrospectively identified all platinum-sensitive recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer patients who underwent minimally invasive or laparotomic secondary cytoreductive surgery between January 2013 and July 2020. Each patient underwent a preoperative positron emission tomography (PET) computerized tomography (CT) scan and diagnostic laparoscopy before secondary cytoreductive surgery. A 1:2 propensity score-matched analysis was performed to balance predictive factors of minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery. Overall, 276 patients were identified (62 minimally invasive and 214 open), and a complete gross resection was achieved in 262 (94.9%) patients. At multivariate analysis, predictive factors for minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery were neoadjuvant chemotherapy at first diagnosis (p=0.007), site of recurrence (p=0.031), and number of lesions (p=0.001). In the 1:2 propensity-matched population (39 minimally invasive and 78 open), complete gross resection was similar for both groups (p=0.082). Early post-operative complications were significantly higher in the laparotomy (33.3%) than in the minimally invasive surgery (10.3%) group (p=0.004). Only one (2.6%) patient experienced a grade >3 early post-operative complication in the minimally invasive surgery group compared with 13 (16.7%) patients in the open cohort (p<0.001). The median follow-up period was 32 months (range: 1-92) in the propensity-matched population. The median post-recurrence survival was 81 months in the minimally invasive surgery group and was not reached in the open group (p=0.11). Patients with single or oligometastatic recurrences can be offered minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery, mainly if localized in the lymph-nodes, and/or if they received neoadjuvant chemotherapy at primary diagnosis. Minimally invasive secondary cytoreductive surgery is associated with favorable perioperative outcomes with no differences in terms of post-recurrence survival with respect to open approach.

Simple hysterectomy versus radical hysterectomy in early-stage cervical cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis

This systematic review (SR) and meta-analysis aims to compare the surgery-related results and oncological outcomes between SH and RH in patients with early-stage cervical cancer. We systematically searched databases including PubMed, Embase and Cochrane to collect studies that compared oncological and surgery-related outcomes between SH and RH groups in patients with stage IA2 and IB1 cervical cancer. A random-effect model calculated the weighted average difference of each primary outcome via Review Manager V.5.4. Seven studies comprising 6977 patients were included into our study. For oncological outcomes, we found no statistical difference in recurrence rate [OR = 0.88; 95% CI (0.50, 1.57); P = 0.68] and Overall Survival (OS) [OR = 1.23; 95% CI (0.69, 2.19), P = 0.48]. No difference was detected in the prevalence of positive LVSI and lymph nodes metastasis between the two groups. Concerning surgery-related outcomes, the comprehensive effects revealed that the bladder injury [OR = 0.28; 95% CI (0.08, 0.94), P = 0.04] and bladder disfunction [OR = 0.10; 95% CI (0.02, 0.53), P = 0.007] of the RH group were higher compared to the SH group. This meta-analysis suggested there are no significant differences in terms of both recurrence rate and overall survival among patients with stage IA2-IB1 cervical cancer undergoing SH or RH, while the SH group has better surgery-related outcomes. These data confirm the need to narrow the indication for RH in early-stage cervical cancer.

Survival associated with the use of one-step nucleic acid amplification (OSNA) to detect sentinel lymph node metastasis in cervical cancer

Sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy is part of surgical treatment of apparent early-stage cervical cancer. SLN is routinely analyzed by ultrastaging and immunohistochemistry. The aim of this study was to assess the survival of patients undergoing SLN analyzed by one-step nucleic acid amplification (OSNA) compared with ultrastaging. Single-center, retrospective, cohort study. Patients undergoing primary surgery and SLN mapping ( ±pelvic lymphadenectomy) for apparent early-stage cervical cancer between May 2017 and January 2021 were included. SLN was analyzed exclusively with OSNA or with ultrastaging. Patients with bilateral SLN mapping failure, with SLN analyzed alternatively/serially with OSNA and ultrastaging, and undergoing neo-adjuvant therapy were excluded. Baseline clinic-pathological differences between the two groups were balanced with propensity-match analysis. One-hundred and fifty-seven patients were included, 50 (31.8%) in the OSNA group and 107 (68.2%) in the ultrastaging group. Median follow up time was 41 months (95%CI:37.9-42.2). 5-year DFS in patients undergoing OSNA versus ultrastaging was 87.0% versus 91.0% (p = 0.809) and 5-year overall survival was 97.9% versus 98.6% (p = 0.631), respectively. No difference in the incidence of lymph node recurrence between the two groups was noted (OSNA 20.0% versus ultrastaging 18.2%, p = 0.931). In the group of negative SLN, no 5-year DFS difference was noted between the two groups (p = 0.692). No 5-year DFS and OS difference was noted after propensity-match analysis (87.6% versus 87.0%, p = 0.726 and 97.4% versus 97.9%, p = 0.998, respectively). The use of OSNA as method to exclusively process SLN in cervical cancer was not associated with worse DFS compared to ultrastaging. Incidence of lymph node recurrence in the two groups was not different.

Transvaginal ultrasound-guided biopsy in patients with suspicious primary advanced tubo-ovarian carcinoma

To assess the accuracy of pathological diagnosis by transvaginal ultrasound-guided biopsy versus surgery in patients with suspicious primary advanced tubo-ovarian carcinoma. The Feasibility, adequacy, and safety of the procedure were also evaluated. Consecutive women with pre-operative suspicious primary advanced tubo-ovarian carcinoma presenting between July 2019 and September 2021 were enrolled. Accuracy was calculated including only cases who underwent surgery. Feasibility was defined as the number of cases in which ultrasound-guided biopsy was possible according to tumor characteristics (morphology and site). Adequacy was defined as the number of conclusive diagnoses out of the samples collected. Safety was defined by the number of major complications which were defined as hospitalization, surgery, and/or blood transfusion. A total of 278 patients were eligible for the study; 158 were enrolled, while 120 were excluded for logistic reasons or patient refusal. Ultrasound-guided biopsy was not feasible in 30 (19%) patients. The samples obtained in the remaining 128 patients were all adequate (100%), and no major complications were noted. A total of 26 (20%) patients started neoadjuvant chemotherapy on the basis of the diagnosis obtained by ultrasound, whereas 102 (80%) patients underwent surgery. Accuracy of ultrasound-guided biopsy versus surgery was 94% (96/102), with six false negative cases at ultrasound (6%). Site (prevesical peritoneum) and size (<8 mm) of the nodules resulted as major predictive factors for ultrasound-guided biopsy failure (false negative). Ultrasound-guided biopsy correctly identified 86 primary invasive tubo-ovarian carcinomas and 10 metastatic tumors. Ultrasound-guided biopsy is a feasible, safe, and accurate method to provide histological diagnosis in suspicious advanced tubo-ovarian cancer patients.

Trabectedin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin in patients with disease progression after PARP inhibitor maintenance: a real-life case–control study

Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor resistance is problematic in epithelial ovarian cancer management and sequencing strategies may be performed to overcome this issue. In this context, our study evaluated the role of non-platinum doublet pegylated liposomal doxorubicin/trabectedin in ovarian cancer platinum-sensitive patients who experienced disease progression under PARP inhibitor maintenance. This case-control study includes patients with recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer treated between March 2016 and April 2021 who progressed under PARP inhibitor maintenance. Data of patients treated with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin/trabectedin (experimental group) were matched 1:1 with a series of patients who received platinum-based treatment (control group). The study outcomes were overall clinical benefit (including complete, partial, and stable response), progression-free survival, and overall survival. The safety of both treatments was also evaluated. A total of 26 patients in both groups were analyzed. Clinical benefit was achieved in 15 (57%) patients in the study group and 17 (65%) patients in the control group (p=0.38). Patients receiving pegylated liposomal doxorubicin/trabectedin had 5 months of progression-free survival, compared with 5 months in patients treated with platinum-based treatment (p=0.62). Patients in the experimental group achieved a median overall survival of 16 months compared with 19 months in the control group (p=0.26) There was no difference concerning severe toxicities (G3-G4) between groups, except for hepatic toxicity, which was experienced in 30% of the patients receiving pegylated liposomal doxorubicin/trabectedin and none in the control group (p<0.009). Pegylated liposomal doxorubicin/trabectedin might be an alternative option to platinum-based treatment in patients experiencing disease progression during PARP inhibitor maintenance with an acceptable toxicity profile. This might be a therapeutic option in this setting, sparing platinum compounds for subsequent relapse.

Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in interval debulking surgery for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer: A single‐center, real‐life experience

BackgroundAn improvement in survival without increasing perioperative morbidity in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer treated with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) after interval debulking surgery (IDS) has been recently demonstrated in a randomized controlled trial. This study was aimed at assessing the feasibility and perioperative outcomes of the use of HIPEC after IDS at a referral cancer center.MethodsOver the study period, 149 IDSs were performed. Patients who had at least International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage III disease, with &lt;2.5 mm of residual disease (RD) at the end of surgery and were not participating in clinical trials received HIPEC. Moreover, specific exclusion criteria were considered. These patients were compared with 51 patients with similar clinical characteristics at the same institution and within the same timeframe who did not receive HIPEC.ResultsNo differences in patient or disease characteristics with the exception of the type of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P = .002) were found between the 2 groups. As for surgical characteristics, significant differences were found in RD after IDS (P = .007) and in the duration of surgery (P &lt; .001), whereas the bowel resection and diversion rates (P = .583 and P = .213, respectively) and the postoperative intensive care unit and hospital stays (P = .567 and P = .727, respectively) were comparable. The times to start adjuvant chemotherapy were also similar (P = .998). Equally, the rates of any grade of both intraoperative complications (P = .189) and early postoperative complications (P = .238) were superimposable.ConclusionsIn the authors' experience, the addition of HIPEC to IDS is feasible in 35% for the population. This value might increase with changes in the inclusion/exclusion criteria. HIPEC does not increase perioperative complications and does not affect a patient's recovery or time to start adjuvant chemotherapy. HIPEC should be offered to select patients listed for IDS.

Maintenance treatment with rucaparib for recurrent ovarian carcinoma in ARIEL3, a randomized phase 3 trial: The effects of best response to last platinum‐based regimen and disease at baseline on efficacy and safety

AbstractBackgroundThe efficacy and safety of rucaparib maintenance treatment in ARIEL3 were evaluated in subgroups based on best response to most recent platinum‐based chemotherapy and baseline disease.MethodsPatients were randomized 2:1 to receive either oral rucaparib at a dosage of 600 mg twice daily or placebo. Investigator‐assessed PFS was assessed in prespecified, nested cohorts: BRCA‐mutated, homologous recombination deficient (HRD; BRCA mutated or wild‐type BRCA/high loss of heterozygosity), and the intent‐to‐treat (ITT) population.ResultsMedian PFS for patients in the ITT population with a complete response to most recent platinum‐based chemotherapy was 11.1 months in the rucaparib arm (126 patients) versus 5.6 months in the placebo arm (64 patients) (HR, 0.33 [95% CI, 0.23–0.48]), and in patients with a partial response (249 vs. 125), it was 9.0 versus 5.3 months (HR, 0.38 [0.30–0.49]). In subgroups of the ITT population based on baseline disease, median PFS was 8.2 versus 5.3 months (HR, 0.40 [0.28–0.57]) in patients with measurable disease (141 rucaparib vs. 66 placebo), 10.4 versus 4.5 months (HR, 0.31 [0.20–0.48]) in those with nonmeasurable but evaluable disease (104 vs. 56), and 14.1 versus 7.3 months (HR, 0.35 [0.24–0.51]) in those with no residual disease (130 vs. 67). Across subgroups, significantly longer median PFS was observed with rucaparib versus placebo in the BRCA‐mutated and HRD cohorts. Objective responses were reported in patients with measurable disease and in patients with nonmeasurable but evaluable baseline disease. Safety was consistent across subgroups.ConclusionRucaparib maintenance treatment provided clinically meaningful efficacy benefits across subgroups based on response to last platinum‐based chemotherapy or baseline disease.

Risk of ovarian recurrence after ovarian conservation in early-stage cervical cancer treated with radical surgery: A propensity match analysis

The primary aim of the present study was to assess the incidence of ovarian metastasis/recurrence and the survival of patients undergoing radical hysterectomy with ovarian conservation (CONSERV) versus oophorectomy (OOPHOR). Secondary aim was to assess the incidence and the characteristics of menopausal symptoms in both groups. Retrospective, multi-center, observational cohort study including patients <50 years with clinical FIGO 2009 stage IA1-IB1/IIA1 cervical carcinoma, treated by primary surgical treatment between 02/2007 and 07/2019. One-to-one case-control matching was used to adjust the baseline prognostic characteristics in survival analysis. 419 patients were included. 264 in the OOPHOR (63.0%) and 155 (37.0%) in the CONSERV group. Ovarian transposition was performed in 28/155 (18.1%) patients. 1/264 (0.4%) patient had ovarian metastasis from endocervical adenocarcinoma. After propensity-matching, 310 patients were included in the survival analysis (155 per group). 5-year disease-free survival of patients undergoing CONSERV versus OOPHOR was 90.6% versus 82.2%, respectively (p = 0.028); 5-year overall survival was 94.3% versus 90.8%, respectively (p = 0.157). Two patients (1.3%) developed recurrence on the conserved ovary. CONSERV represented an independent protective factor of recurrence (HR:0.361, 95%CI 0.169-0.769; p = 0.008). 28 (20.6%) in the CONSERV group versus 116 (60.4%) in the OOPHOR group complained of menopausal symptoms during follow up (p < 0.001). HRT was prescribed to 12.0% of patients (median HRT time was 20 months). CONSERV was associated with reduced risk of recurrence and menopausal symptoms in early-stage cervical cancer. As the risk of ovarian metastasis and ovarian recurrence is relatively low, CONSERV in pre-menopausal women has to be considered.

Overall Survival With Maintenance Olaparib at a 7-Year Follow-Up in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Advanced Ovarian Cancer and a BRCA Mutation: The SOLO1/GOG 3004 Trial

PURPOSE In SOLO1/GOG 3004 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01844986 ), maintenance therapy with the poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor olaparib provided a sustained progression-free survival benefit in patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer and a BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 (BRCA) mutation. We report overall survival (OS) after a 7-year follow-up, a clinically relevant time point and the longest follow-up for any poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor in the first-line setting. METHODS This double-blind phase III trial randomly assigned patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer and a BRCA mutation in clinical response to platinum-based chemotherapy to maintenance olaparib (n = 260) or placebo (n = 131) for up to 2 years. A prespecified descriptive analysis of OS, a secondary end point, was conducted after a 7-year follow-up. RESULTS The median duration of treatment was 24.6 months with olaparib and 13.9 months with placebo, and the median follow-up was 88.9 and 87.4 months, respectively. The hazard ratio for OS was 0.55 (95% CI, 0.40 to 0.76; P = .0004 [ P &lt; .0001 required to declare statistical significance]). At 7 years, 67.0% of olaparib patients versus 46.5% of placebo patients were alive, and 45.3% versus 20.6%, respectively, were alive and had not received a first subsequent treatment (Kaplan-Meier estimates). The incidence of myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukemia remained low, and new primary malignancies remained balanced between treatment groups. CONCLUSION Results indicate a clinically meaningful, albeit not statistically significant according to prespecified criteria, improvement in OS with maintenance olaparib in patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer and a BRCA mutation and support the use of maintenance olaparib to achieve long-term remission in this setting; the potential for cure may also be enhanced. No new safety signals were observed during long-term follow-up.

Diagnostic performance of ultrasound in assessing the extension of disease in advanced ovarian cancer

Surgical exploration remains the gold standard for evaluating the extension of disease and predicting resectability. A laparoscopy-based scoring model was developed by Fagotti and colleagues in 2006 and updated in 2015, based on the intraoperative presence or absence of some specific cancer features. The model proved an overall accuracy rate of 77% to 100% and is considered the reference test for assessing resectability in our institution. The primary aim of the study was to analyze the agreement between preoperative ultrasound examination and laparoscopic findings in assessing the extension of intraabdominal disease using 6 parameters described by Fagotti's score. This was a prospective single-center observational study. Between January 2019 and June 2020, consecutive patients with clinical or radiological suspicion of ovarian or peritoneal cancer were assessed with preoperative ultrasound examination and assigned a score based on the 6 Fagotti score parameters (great omentum, liver surface, lesser omentum/stomach/spleen, parietal peritoneum, diaphragms, bowel disease). Presence of mesenteral retraction of the small bowel and miliary carcinomatosis on the serosa were also evaluated. Each parameter was correlated with laparoscopic findings. Concordance was calculated between ultrasound and laparoscopic parameters using Cohen's kappa. Cohen's kappa ranged from 0.70 to 0.90 for carcinomatosis on the small or large bowel, supracolic omentum, liver surface, and diaphragms. Cohen's kappa test was lower for carcinomatosis on the parietal peritoneum (k=0.63) and on the lesser omentum or lesser curvature of the stomach or spleen (k=0.54). The agreement between ultrasound and surgical predictive index value (score) was k=0.74. For the evaluation of mesenteral retraction and miliary carcinomatosis, the agreement was low (k=0.57 and k=0.36, respectively). The results of ultrasound and laparoscopy in the assessment of intraabdominal tumor spread were in substantial agreement for almost all the parameters. Ultrasound examination can play a useful role in the preoperative management of patients with ovarian cancer when used in dedicated referral centers.

Nomogram to predict feasibility of minimally invasive interval debulking surgery in advanced ovarian cancer

Currently, there is no clear guidance defining the ideal candidate for minimally invasive interval debulking surgery. This study aimed to identify predictive factors for a minimally invasive approach in patients with advanced ovarian cancer who are candidates for interval debulking surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. This was a single institution retrospective study conducted between January 2014 and June 2020 Perioperative variables were used to predict the likelihood of minimally invasive interval debulking surgery using multivariable models. A nomogram was developed, and internal validation was performed using the bootstrapping correction technique. This nomogram was built to visualize the effect of perioperative variables on the estimated probability of minimally invasive interval debulking surgery in patients with a clinical response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. We used the four significant perioperative variables according to logistic regression. A total of 108 (28.4%) and 272 (71.6%) patients underwent interval debulking surgery by a minimally invasive or open approach, respectively. Absence of omental cake (odds ratio (OR) 9.15, 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.26 to 19.64, p<0.001), high volume surgeon (OR 5.43, 95% CI 2.75 to 10.71, p<0.001), less than two peritoneal sites involved (OR 2.94, 95% CI 1.34 to 6.43, p=0.007), and CA125 normalization (OR 1.79, 95% CI 1.05 to 3.36, p=0.049) correlated with the feasibility of minimally invasive interval debulking surgery at multivariate analysis. The calibration plot demonstrated good agreement between the predicted and actual probability of minimally invasive interval debulking surgery (p=0.93, Hosmer-Lemeshow test). Our nomogram may serve as a useful tool to choose the surgical approach in patients with advanced ovarian cancer undergoing interval debulking surgery.

TRImodal DEfinitive invasive vagiNal carcinoma Treatment (TRIDENT protocol): how a standardized approach may change prognostic outcomes

Vaginal carcinoma is a rare malignancy accounting for 1-2% of all gynecological cancers. Surgery has a limited role, while definitive radiotherapy-chemotherapy followed by interventional radiotherapy is considered a valid alternative. The aim of the TRIDENT (TRImodal DEfinitive invasive vagiNal carcinoma Treatment) pilot study was to report the results of a modern standardized trimodal protocol treatment consisting of image guided definitive radiotherapy-chemotherapy followed by image guided interventional radiotherapy in terms of safety and efficacy. Between January 2019 and December 2021, we analyzed 21 consecutive patients with primary vaginal cancer who had received radiotherapy-chemotherapy followed by interventional radiotherapy. The primary study endpoint was local control, and secondary endpoints were metastasis free survival, overall survival, and rate and severity of acute and late toxicities. 14 patients had FIGO (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics) stage II, five patients had stage III, and two had stage IVB disease. Median total external beam radiotherapy dose for the tumor was 45 Gy. Median total dose on positive nodes was 60 Gy. Median total dose for interventional radiotherapy was 28 Gy over four high dose rate fractions to achieve between 85 and 95 Gy equivalent dose, in 2 Gy fractions (EQD2)α/β10, to the high risk clinical target volume, and 60 Gy EQD2α/β10 to the intermediate risk clinical target volume. All patients received weekly platinum based chemotherapy. Median follow-up was 20 months (range 10-56 months). Two year actuarial local control, metastasis free survival, and overall survival rate were 79.4%, 90.5%, and 79.4%, respectively. In terms of acute toxicity, there were no grade 4 events and only one acute grade (G) 3 toxicity (skin). Only vaginal stenosis (G3) was documented 12 months after therapy due to late toxicity. In this study, definitive radiotherapy-chemotherapy followed by interventional radiotherapy was a safe and effective treatment modality for primary vaginal cancer.

Peritoneal HPV‐DNA test in cervical cancer (PIONEER study): A proof of concept

AbstractThe aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of peritoneal human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in different clinical cervical cancer (CC) settings, and its association with potential clinical and/or histological factors. This is a single‐center, prospective, observational study. Consecutive patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent/persistent CC, between March 2019 and April 2020, were included. A group of patients undergoing surgery for benign gynecological conditions was included as control group. All patients underwent HPV‐DNA test in the cervix and in the peritoneal cavity simultaneously at time of surgery. Two‐hundred seventy‐two patients had cervical and peritoneal HPV test analyzed. Cervical and peritoneal HPV positivity (PHP) was found in 235 (88.0%) and 78 (28.7%) patients, respectively; the prevalence of PHP was 17.7% in early stage, 28.8% in locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC) and 46.6% in the metastatic/persistent/recurrent setting (P = .001). No control patient was found to have peritoneal HPV infection. Higher frequency of PHP was documented in patients with larger tumor size (P = .003), presence of cervical HPV 16/18 genotypes (P &lt; .001), higher number of cervical high‐risk (HR)‐HPV per patient (P = .018) and peritoneal carcinomatosis (P &lt; .001). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that lack of preoperative cervical conization in early stages (P = .030), while higher International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage (P = .021) and presence of cervical HPV 16/18 (P = .001) in LACC, was associated with PHP. This is a proof‐of‐concept study. A number of potential clinical implications, including prognosis, could be obtained by further studies.

Sentinel lymph node mapping with indocyanine green in cervical cancer patients undergoing open radical hysterectomy: a single-institution series

Abstract Purpose To assess the rate of bilateral sentinel lymph node (SLN) detection with indocyanine green (ICG), to evaluate the sensitivity and the negative predictive value of cervical cancer patients undergoing open radical hysterectomy; to compare open versus minimally invasive SLN biopsy performance and to assess factors related to no/unilateral SLN mapping. Methods We retrospectively reviewed consecutive patients with FIGO 2018 stage IA1 with lymph-vascular space involvement to IIB and IIIC1p cervical carcinoma who underwent SLN mapping with ICG followed by systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy between 05/2017 and 06/2020. Patients were divided according to surgical approach for statistical analysis. Results Eighty-five patients met inclusion criteria. Twenty-seven (31.8%) underwent open and 58 (68.2%) underwent minimally invasive SLN mapping. No difference in any SLN mapping (laparotomy 92.6% and minimally invasive 91.4%) or in SLN bilateral detection (laparotomy 72.0% and minimally invasive 84.9%) (p = 0.850 and p = 0.222, respectively), in median number of SLNs mapped and retrieved (2 in both groups, p = 0.165) and in site of SLN mapping per hemi-pelvis (right side, p = 0273 and left side, p = 0.618) was evident between open and minimally invasive approach. Per-patient sensitivity of SLN biopsy in laparotomy was 83.3% (95% CI 35.9–99.6%) and the negative predictive value was 95.0% (95% CI 76.0–99.1%). No difference in per-patient sensitivity was noted between two approaches (p = 0.300). None of the analyzed variables was associated with no/unilateral SLN mapping. Conclusion The use of ICG to detect SLN in cervical cancer treated with open surgery allows a bilateral detection, sensitivity and negative predictive value comparable to minimally invasive surgery with potential advantages of ICG compared to other tracers.

Predictive factors of surgical complications after pelvic exenteration for gynecological malignancies: a large single-institution experience

To evaluate pre-operative predictors of early (<30 days) severe complications (grade Dindo 3+) in patients with gynecological malignancy submitted to pelvic exenteration (PE). We retrospectively analyzed 129 patients submitted to surgery at Fondazione Policlinico Gemelli between 2010 and 2019. We included patients affected by primary or recurrent/persistent cervical, endometrial, or vulvar/vaginal cancers. Post-operative complications were graded according to the Dindo classification. Logistic regression was used to analyze potential predictors of complications. We performed 63 anterior PE, 10 posterior PE, and 56 total PE. The incidence of early severe post-operative complications was 27.9% (n=36), and the early mortality rate was 2.3% (n=3). More frequent complications were related to the urinary diversion and intestinal surgery. In univariable analysis, hemoglobin ≤10 g/dL (odds ratio [OR]=4.2; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.65-10.7; p=0.003), low albumin levels (OR=3.9; 95% CI=1.27-12.11; p=0.025), diabetes (OR=4.15; 95% CI=1.22-14.1; p=0.022), 2+ comorbidities at presentation (OR=5.18; 95% CI=1.49-17.93; p=0.012) were predictors of early severe complications. In multivariable analysis, only low hemoglobin and comorbidities at presentation were independent predictors of complications. Pelvic exenteration is an aggressive surgery characterized by a high rate of post-operative complications. Pre-operative assessment of comorbidities and patient health status are crucial to better select the right candidate for this type of surgery.

Electrochemotherapy with intravenous bleomycin for heavily pre-treated vulvar cancer patients

The management of vulvar cancer recurrences is complicated by patients' advanced age and comorbidities. Bleomycin-based electrochemotherapy is a potential treatment option in this setting. However, no data on long-term outcomes are available. Therefore, a multicenter observational study was designed to evaluate the 5-year results in these patients. Data about patients and tumor characteristics, electrochemotherapy cycles, clinical response, and follow-up were recorded. Treatment procedures were performed according to the European Standard Operating Procedures of Electrochemotherapy (ESOPE) guidelines. Response was evaluated according to the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) criteria. Fifty-one patients (mean age 82.31±7.28 years) with squamous cell vulvar cancer underwent electrochemotherapy (median number of sessions 1; range 1-4). 20 patients had complete response and 32% of these were disease-free after 2 years (median progression-free survival 16.8 months). In 13 patients with partial response the median progression-free survival was 15.36 months, while patients with stable or progressive disease showed tumor relapse after 6.95 and 3.26 months, respectively (p<0.001). Median overall survival was 18.77, 13.07, 6.73, and 11.13 months in patients with complete response, partial response, stable disease, and progressive disease, respectively (p=0.001). Long-term follow-up of vulvar cancer patients showed reasonable tumor control after electrochemotherapy and improved progression-free survival and overall survival in responder subjects compared with non-responders. Further studies aimed at improving local response after electrochemotherapy are warranted. Thus, this approach represents a potential alternative for these patients.

Trans-inguinal pelvic lymphadenectomy in vulvar cancer patients: TRIPLE pilot study

The goal of this study was to assess the feasibility and safety of a retrograde extraperitoneal trans-inguinal novel approach to pelvic lymphadenectomy in vulvar cancer patients. The secondary objectives were to assess complications (early and late) and oncological outcomes. In this pilot study, all patients referred to our institution from November 2019 to May 2021 were evaluated. The inclusion criteria were patients diagnosed with primary/recurrent vulvar cancer and who were candidates for concomitant groin and pelvic lymph node dissection. A consecutive sampling was planned during the study period. After conventional inguino-femoral lymph nodal dissection, ipsilateral extraperitoneal trans-inguinal pelvic lymphadenectomy (TRIPLE) was performed through a groin incision. Clinical data, type of treatment, perioperative complications, and follow-up were evaluated. 13 patients (8 primary, 5 recurrent vulvar cancer) underwent 16 TRIPLE procedures (10 unilateral, 3 bilateral). The median age was 69 years (range 58-93 years); 8 patients had comorbidities (61.5%). Up front locoregional radiotherapy was previously performed in two cases (15.4%). The pathology report showed metastatic lymph nodes in 20 (87%) groins and 11 (68.8%) pelvic sites; the mean number of removed and metastatic pelvic lymph nodes was 12.1 (range 5-33) and 2.9 (range 0-18), respectively. No intra-operative site-specific complications occurred. One (5.9%) post-operative site-specific complication was reported (pelvic abscess, grade 2), which was treated with antibiotics. One patient died due to concomitant pneumonia. No unilateral pelvic lymph node recurrence occurred during follow-up (median 13 months, range 2-43 months); 3 patients (23.1%) had distant site recurrence (median disease-free survival 9 months). TRIPLE seems to be a feasible and safe technique, providing adequate lymph node dissection. Despite being a high-risk and fragile population, morbidity was similar to previously reported data for conventional mini-invasive approaches. Prospective larger comparative series are necessary.

Locally advanced cervical carcinoma patients treated with chemoradiation followed by radical surgery: clinical response and oncological outcomes according to histotype after propensity score analysis

The aims of this study were to analyze the pathological response, and survival outcomes of adenocarcinoma/adenosquamous (AC/ASC) versus squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC) managed by chemoradiotherapy followed by radical surgery. Retrospective, multicenter, observational study, including patients with SCC and AC/ACS LACC patients treated with preoperative CT/RT followed by tailored radical surgery (RS) between 06/2002 and 05/2017. Clinical-pathological characteristics were compared between patients with SCC versus AC/ASC. A 1:3 ratio propensity score (PS) matching was applied to remove the variables imbalance between the two groups. After PS, 320 patients were included, of which 240 (75.0%) in the SCC group, and 80 (25.0%) in the AC/ASC group. Clinico-pathological and surgical baseline characteristics were balanced between the two study groups. Percentage of pathologic complete response was 47.5% in SCC patients versus 22.4% of AC/ASC ones (p < 0.001). With a median follow-up of 51 months (range:1-199), there were 54/240 (22.5%) recurrences in SCC versus 28/80 (35.0%) in AC/ASC patients (p = 0.027). AC/ASC patients experienced worse disease free (DFS), and overall survival (OS) compared to SCC patients (p = 0.019, and p = 0.048, respectively). In multivariate analysis, AC/ACS histotype, and FIGO stage were associated with worse DFS and OS. In LACC patients treated with CT/RT followed by RS, AC/ASC histology was associated with lower pathological complete response to CT/RT, and higher risk of recurrence and death compared with SCC patients. This highlights the need for specific therapeutic strategies based on molecular characterization to identify targets and develop novel treatments.

Stereotactic body radiotherapy in oligometastatic cervical cancer (MITO-RT2/RAD study): a collaboration of MITO, AIRO GYN, and MaNGO groups

This retrospective, multicenter study analyzes the efficacy and safety of stereotactic body radiotherapy in a large cohort of patients with oligometastatic/persistent/recurrent cervical cancer. A standardized data collection from several radiotherapy centers that treated patients by stereotactic body radiotherapy between March 2006 and February 2021 was set up. Clinical and stereotactic body radiotherapy parameters were collected. Objective response rate was defined as a composite of complete and partial response, while clinical benefit included objective response rate plus stable disease. Radiation Therapy Oncology Group/European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer and Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events scales were used to grade toxicities. The primary endpoints were the rate of complete response to stereotactic body radiotherapy, and the 2 year actuarial local control rate on a 'per lesion' basis. The secondary end points were progression-free survival and overall survival, as well as toxicity. A total of 83 patients with oligometastatic/persistent/recurrent cervical cancer bearing 125 lesions treated by stereotactic body radiotherapy at 15 different centers were selected for analysis. Of the sites of metastatic disease, lymph node metastases were most common (55.2%), followed by parenchyma lesions (44.8%). Median total dose was 35 Gy (range 10-60), in five fractions (range 1-10), with a median dose/fraction of 7 Gy (range 4-26). Complete, partial, and stable response were found in 73 (58.4%), 29 (23.2%), and 16 (12.8%) lesions, respectively, reaching 94.4% of the clinical benefit rate. Forty-six (55.4%) patients had a complete response. Patients achieving complete response on a 'per lesion' basis experienced a 2 year actuarial local control rate of 89.0% versus 22.1% in lesions not achieving complete response (p<0.001). The 2 year actuarial progression-free survival rate was 42.5% in patients with complete response versus 7.8% in patients with partial response or stable or progressive disease (p=0.001). The 2 year actuarial overall survival rate was 68.9% in patients with complete response versus 44.3% in patients with partial response or stable or progressive disease (p=0.015). Fifteen patients (18.1%) had mild acute toxicity, totaling 29 side events. Late toxicity was documented in four patients (4.8%) totaling seven adverse events. Our analysis confirmed the efficacy of stereotactic body radiotherapy in oligometastatic/persistent/recurrent cervical cancer patients. The low toxicity profile encourages the wider use of stereotactic body radiotherapy in this setting.

The potential role of systemic inflammatory markers in predicting recurrence in early-stage cervical cancer

The influence of systemic inflammatory markers on early-stage cervical cancer (ECC) patients is contradictory. No previous study analyzed whether these markers may be suggestive of recurrence. The aim of this study was to assess whether the inflammatory markers level of patients with recurrence during surveillance was different from those of patients without recurrence representing a risk factor for recurrence. Retrospective, single-center, observational study. Patients with 2009 FIGO EEC surgically treated between 2012 and 2019 were included. Baseline inflammatory markers were evaluated on the results of the complete blood count (CBC) and coagulation tests. Inflammatory markers of relapsed patients were evaluated on the last CBC performed before the relapse diagnosis. Inflammatory markers of patients with no recurrence were evaluated on the available CBC taken at the same median follow-up time as the one from relapsed patients. 174 patients were included. Baseline Systemic immune inflammation index (SII) > 663 and Systemic inflammation response index (SIRI) > 0.98 were associated with significant risk of recurrence. SII>663 and Neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR) > 2.41 were associated with increased risk of death. Significant changes between relapsed (n = 23) and non-relapsed (n = 151) patients in median values of SII (615 versus 490, p-value = 0.001), SIRI (0.74 versus 1.05, p-value = 0.005), NRL (2.95 versus 2.15, p-value = 0.0035), and MLR (0.26 versus 0.22 p-value = 0.020), showed that different levels of inflammatory markers could help identifying recurrent disease during surveillance. Baseline SII>663 and SIRI>0.98 were associated with increased risk of recurrence. Higher median values of SII, SIRI, NLR and MLR in relapsed patients highlight their potential association with recurrence.

Radiomics systematic review in cervical cancer: gynecological oncologists’ perspective

Radiomics is the process of extracting quantitative features from radiological images, and represents a relatively new field in gynecological cancers. Cervical cancer has been the most studied gynecological tumor for what concerns radiomics analysis. The aim of this study was to report on the clinical applications of radiomics combined and/or compared with clinical-pathological variables in patients with cervical cancer. A systematic review of the literature from inception to February 2023 was performed, including studies on cervical cancer analysing a predictive/prognostic radiomics model, which was combined and/or compared with a radiological or a clinical-pathological model. A total of 57 of 334 (17.1%) screened studies met inclusion criteria. The majority of studies used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), but positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scan, CT scan, and ultrasound scan also underwent radiomics analysis. In apparent early-stage disease, the majority of studies (16/27, 59.3%) analysed the role of radiomics signature in predicting lymph node metastasis; six (22.2%) investigated the prediction of radiomics to detect lymphovascular space involvement, one (3.7%) investigated depth of stromal infiltration, and one investigated (3.7%) parametrial infiltration. Survival prediction was evaluated both in early-stage and locally advanced settings. No study focused on the application of radiomics in metastatic or recurrent disease. Radiomics signatures were predictive of pathological and oncological outcomes, particularly if combined with clinical variables. These may be integrated in a model using different clinical-pathological and translational characteristics, with the aim to tailor and personalize the treatment of each patient with cervical cancer.

Tisotumab Vedotin in Combination With Carboplatin, Pembrolizumab, or Bevacizumab in Recurrent or Metastatic Cervical Cancer: Results From the innovaTV 205/GOG-3024/ENGOT-cx8 Study

PURPOSE Tissue factor is highly expressed in cervical carcinoma and can be targeted by tisotumab vedotin (TV), an antibody-drug conjugate. This phase Ib/II study evaluated TV in combination with bevacizumab, pembrolizumab, or carboplatin for recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer (r/mCC). METHODS This open-label, multicenter study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03786081 ) included dose-escalation arms that assessed dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) and identified the recommended phase II dose (RP2D) of TV in combination with bevacizumab (arm A), pembrolizumab (arm B), or carboplatin (arm C). The dose-expansion arms evaluated TV antitumor activity and safety at RP2D in combination with carboplatin as first-line (1L) treatment (arm D) or with pembrolizumab as 1L (arm E) or second-/third-line (2L/3L) treatment (arm F). The primary end point of dose expansion was objective response rate (ORR). RESULTS A total of 142 patients were enrolled. In dose escalation (n = 41), no DLTs were observed; the RP2D was TV 2 mg/kg plus bevacizumab 15 mg/kg on day 1 once every 3 weeks, pembrolizumab 200 mg on day 1 once every 3 weeks, or carboplatin AUC 5 on day 1 once every 3 weeks. In dose expansion (n = 101), the ORR was 54.5% (n/N, 18/33; 95% CI, 36.4 to 71.9) with 1L TV + carboplatin (arm D), 40.6% (n/N, 13/32; 95% CI, 23.7 to 59.4) with 1L TV + pembrolizumab (arm E), and 35.3% (12/34; 19.7 to 53.5) with 2L/3L TV + pembrolizumab (arm F). The median duration of response was 8.6 months, not reached, and 14.1 months, in arms D, E, and F, respectively. Grade ≥3 adverse events (≥15%) were anemia, diarrhea, nausea, and thrombocytopenia in arm D and anemia in arm F (none ≥15%, arm E). CONCLUSION TV in combination with bevacizumab, carboplatin, or pembrolizumab demonstrated manageable safety and encouraging antitumor activity in treatment-naive and previously treated r/mCC.

Evaluation of survival and mortality in pelvic exenteration for gynecologic malignancies: a systematic review, meta-analyses, and meta-regression study

Pelvic exenteration is a radical surgery for advanced or recurrent pelvic tumors, requiring careful patient selection and a multi-disciplinary approach. Despite advancements, it remains high-risk, with limited data on outcomes. The present meta-analysis evaluates survival, mortality, and trends to clarify its role in gynecologic oncology. A systematic search was conducted in January 2025 to identify studies on pelvic exenteration outcomes for gynecologic malignancies. Studies with at least 10 patients reporting 5-year overall survival or 30-day mortality were included. Data extracted included patient and surgical characteristics, and a scoring system based on study design, sample size, and center volume was used to include high-quality studies (score ≥3). Poisson regression models were used to analyze the associations between predictors and outcomes, with results expressed as incidence rate ratios and a 95% CI. A total of 46 studies involving 4417 patients met the inclusion criteria. Most patients underwent pelvic exenteration for cervical cancer (N = 3183). Positive pelvic and aortic nodal involvement were key predictors of reduced 5-year overall survival, decreasing by 3.9% and 5.9% per 1% increase in nodal positivity, respectively. Pelvic wall involvement also significantly reduced survival by 15.9%. The 30-day mortality rate was 5.1%, with sepsis (27.2%) being the leading cause of death. Peri-operative mortality decreased significantly over time, with each year of publication associated with a 2.6% decrease in incidence rate. However, pelvic sidewall involvement and total exenteration increased 30-day mortality by 11.5% and 0.7%, respectively. Pelvic exenteration remains a viable but high-risk option for select patients with advanced gynecologic malignancies. Pre-operative assessment and multi-disciplinary planning are essential for optimizing outcomes.

Olaparib as Treatment Versus Nonplatinum Chemotherapy in Patients With Platinum-Sensitive Relapsed Ovarian Cancer: Phase III SOLO3 Study Final Overall Survival Results

Olaparib treatment significantly improved objective response rate (primary end point) and progression-free survival versus nonplatinum chemotherapy in patients with BRCA-mutated platinum-sensitive relapsed ovarian cancer in the open-label phase III SOLO3 trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02282020 ). We report final overall survival (OS; prespecified secondary end point), post hoc OS analysis by number of previous chemotherapy lines, and exploratory BRCA reversion mutation analysis. Two hundred sixty-six patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to olaparib tablets (300 mg twice daily; n = 178) or physician's choice of single-agent nonplatinum chemotherapy (pegylated liposomal doxorubicin, paclitaxel, gemcitabine, or topotecan; n = 88). OS was similar with olaparib versus chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR], 1.07 [95% CI, 0.76 to 1.49]; P = .71, median 34.9 and 32.9 months, respectively, full analysis set). OS with olaparib was favorable in patients with two previous chemotherapy lines (HR, 0.83 [olaparib v chemotherapy] [95% CI, 0.51 to 1.38]; median 37.9 v 28.8 months); however, a potential detrimental effect was seen in patients with at least three previous chemotherapy lines (HR, 1.33 [95% CI, 0.84 to 2.18]; median 29.9 v 39.4 months). BRCA reversion mutations might have contributed to this finding. No patient randomly assigned to olaparib with a BRCA reversion mutation detected at baseline (6 of 170 [3.5%]) achieved an objective tumor response.

Impact of metformin, statins, and beta blockers on survival in patients with primary ovarian cancer: combined analysis of four prospective trials of AGO-OVAR and ENGOT/GCIG collaborators

The aim of this study was to investigate the association of co-medication with metformin, a statin, or beta blocker with survival in patients with primary ovarian cancer. Individual data from three phase III, randomized controlled trials (AGO-OVAR 11, AGO-OVAR 12, and AGO-OVAR 16) and one phase II trial (AGO-OVAR 15) were pooled and analyzed. Patients were classified as ever user if the specific co-medication was documented at least once during the trial, and were compared with never users as controls. Association of co-medications and outcomes were adjusted for potential confounders (age, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage, histology, residual disease after surgery, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status, body mass index, Charlson Comorbidity Index, and assigned treatment within the trial) in multivariate Cox regression analyses. Overall, n=2857 patients were included. Ever users were: 100 patients received metformin (3.5%), 226 patients received statins (7.9%), and 475 (16.6%) patients received beta blockers (n=391 selective beta blockers; 84 non-selective beta blockers) as co-medication. There were no significant differences regarding the baseline characteristics except that ever users were significantly older, more obese, and had more comorbidities, according to the Charlson Comorbidity Index, compared with controls. Multivariate analyses for progression free survival and overall survival revealed neither a significant impact of metformin on survival (progression free survival hazard ratio (HR) 0.94, 95% confidence interval CI 0.69 to 1.29, p=0.7; overall survival HR 0.82, 95% CI 0.58 to 1.17, p=0.28) nor for statins (progression free survival HR 0.98, 95% CI 0.82 to 1.18, p=0.87; overall survival HR 0.91, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.12, p=0.37). In contrast, ever users of selective beta blockers had a significantly higher risk for recurrence and death (progression free survival HR 1.22, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.41, p=0.009; overall survival HR 1.25 95% CI 1.06 to 1.47, p=0.009). In this analysis, co-medication with metformin or statins had no significant impact on survival in patients with primary ovarian cancer. In contrast, co-medication with a beta blocker was associated with worse survival. However, whether this observation is related to the underlying condition rather than a direct negative impact on tumor biology remains unclear.

Application of novel algorithm on a retrospective series to implement the molecular classification for endometrial cancer

The study aimed to validate the Betella algorithm, focusing on molecular analyses exclusively for endometrial cancer patients, where molecular classification alters risk assessment based on ESGO/ESTRO/ESP 2020 guidelines. Conducted between March 2021 and March 2023, the retrospective research involved endometrial cancer patients undergoing surgery and comprehensive molecular analyses. These included p53 and mismatch repair proteins immunohistochemistry, as well as DNA sequencing for POLE exonuclease domain. We applied the Betella algorithm to our population and evaluated the proportion of patients in which the molecular analysis changed the risk class attribution. Out of 102 patients, 97 % obtained complete molecular analyses. The cohort exhibited varying molecular classifications: 10.1 % as POLE ultra-mutated, 30.3 % as mismatch repair deficient, 11.1 % as p53 abnormal, and 48.5 % as non-specified molecular classification. Multiple classifiers were present in 3 % of cases. Integrating molecular classification into risk group calculation led to risk group migration in 11.1 % of patients: 7 moved to lower risk classes due to POLE mutations, while 4 shifted to higher risk due to p53 alterations. Applying the Betella algorithm, we can spare the POLE sequencing in 65 cases (65.7 %) and p53 immunochemistry in 17 cases (17.2 %). In conclusion, we externally validated the Betella algorithm in our population. The application of this new proposed algorithm enables assignment of the proper risk class and, consequently, the appropriate indication for adjuvant treatment, allowing for the rationalization of the resources that can be allocated otherwise, not only for the benefit of settings with low resources, but of all settings in general.

Consensus on surgical technique for sentinel lymph node dissection in cervical cancer

The purpose of this study was to establish a consensus on the surgical technique for sentinel lymph node (SLN) dissection in cervical cancer. A 26 question survey was emailed to international expert gynecological oncology surgeons. A two-step modified Delphi method was used to establish consensus. After a first round of online survey, the questions were amended and a second round, along with semistructured interviews was performed. Consensus was defined using a 70% cut-off for agreement. Twenty-five of 38 (65.8%) experts responded to the first and second rounds of the online survey. Agreement ≥70% was reached for 13 (50.0%) questions in the first round and for 15 (57.7%) in the final round. Consensus agreement identified 15 recommended, three optional, and five not recommended steps. Experts agreed on the following recommended procedures: use of indocyanine green as a tracer; superficial (with or without deep) injection at 3 and 9 o'clock; injection at the margins of uninvolved mucosa avoiding vaginal fornices; grasping the cervix with forceps only in part of the cervix is free of tumor; use of a minimally invasive approach for SLN biopsy in the case of simple trachelectomy/conization; identification of the ureter, obliterated umbilical artery, and external iliac vessels before SLN excision; commencing the dissection at the level of the uterine artery and continuing laterally; and completing dissection in one hemi-pelvis before proceeding to the contralateral side. Consensus was also reached in recommending against injection at 6 and 12 o'clock, and injection directly into the tumor in cases of the tumor completely replacing the cervix; against removal of nodes through port without protective maneuvers; absence of an ultrastaging protocol; and against modifying tracer concentration at the time of re-injection after mapping failure. Recommended, optional, and not recommended steps of SLN dissection in cervical cancer have been identified based on consensus among international experts. These represent a surgical guide that may be used by surgeons in clinical trials and for quality assurance in routine practice.

Single-Agent Trabectedin Versus Physician's Choice Chemotherapy in Patients With Recurrent Ovarian Cancer With BRCA-Mutated and/or BRCAness Phenotype: A Randomized Phase III Trial

PURPOSE Literature evidence suggests that trabectedin monotherapy is effective in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer (OC) presenting BRCA mutation and/or BRCAness phenotype. METHODS A prospective, open-label, randomized phase III MITO-23 trial evaluated the activity and safety of trabectedin 1.3 mg/m2 given once every 3 weeks (arm A) in BRCA 1/2 mutation carriers or patients with BRCAness phenotype (ie, patients who responded to ≥two previous platinum-based treatments) with recurrent OC, primary peritoneal carcinoma, or fallopian tube cancer in comparison with physician's choice chemotherapy in the control arm (arm B; pegylated liposomal doxorubicin, topotecan, gemcitabine, once-weekly paclitaxel, or carboplatin). The primary end point was overall survival (OS) evaluated in the intention-to-treat population. RESULTS Overall, 244 patients from 21 MITO centers were randomly assigned (arm A = 122/arm B = 122). More than 70% of patients received ≥three previous chemotherapy lines and 35.7% had received a poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor (PARPi) before enrollment. Median OS was not significantly different between the arms: arm A: 15.8 versus arm B: 17.9 months ( P = .304). Median progression-free survival was 4.9 months in arm A versus 4.4 months in arm B ( P = .897). Among 208 patients evaluable for efficacy, the objective response rate was 17.1% in arm A and 21.4% in arm B, with comparable median duration of response (5.62 v 5.66 months, respectively). No superior effect was observed for trabectedin in the prespecified subgroup analyses according to BRCA mutational status, chemotherapy type, and pretreatment with a PARPi and/or platinum-free interval. Trabectedin showed a higher frequency of grade ≥3 adverse events (AEs), serious AEs, and serious adverse drug reactions compared with control chemotherapy. CONCLUSION Trabectedin did not improve median OS and showed a worse safety profile in comparison with physician's choice control chemotherapy.

Gestational choriocarcinoma

Gestational choriocarcinoma accounts for 5% of gestational trophoblastic neoplasms. Approximately 50%, 25%, and 25% of gestational choriocarcinoma occur after molar pregnancies, term pregnancies, and other gestational events, respectively. The FIGO scoring system categorizes patients into low (score 0 to 6) and high risk (score 7 or more) choriocarcinoma. Single-agent and multi-agent chemotherapy are used in low- and high-risk patients, respectively. Chemotherapy for localized disease has a goal of eradication of disease without surgery and is associated with favorable prognosis and fertility preservation. Most patients with gestational choriocarcinoma are cured with chemotherapy; however, some (<5.0%) will die as a result of multi-drug resistance, underscoring the need for novel approaches in this group of patients. Although there are limited data due to its rarity, the treatment response with immunotherapy is high, ranging between 50-70%. Novel combinations of immune checkpoint inhibitors with targeted therapies (including VEGFR-2 inhibitors) are under evaluation. PD-L1 inhibitors are considered a potential important opportunity for chemo-resistant patients, and to replace or de-escalate chemotherapy to avoid or minimize chemotherapy toxicity. In this review, the Rare Tumor Working Group and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer evaluated the current landscape and further perspective in the management of patients diagnosed with gestational choriocarcinoma.

Clinical Trials (8)

1813Works
109Papers
265Collaborators
8Trials
Ovarian NeoplasmsEndometrial NeoplasmsCarcinoma, Ovarian EpithelialGenital Neoplasms, FemaleNeoplasm StagingPrognosisUterine Cervical Neoplasms

Positions

Scientific Director IRCCS

Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS Università Cattolica del S. Cuore · Dipartimento Scienze Salute della Donna, del Bambino e di Sanità Pubblica