Investigator

Wenzhi Kong

Unknown Institution

WKWenzhi Kong
Papers(1)
The prognostic signif…
Collaborators(6)
Zangyu PanZhuang LiHui WangJinwei MiaoMengqi DengPenglin Liu
Institutions(5)
Unknown InstitutionQilu Hospital Of Shan…Women's Hospital, Sch…Beijing Obstetrics An…Capital Medical Unive…

Papers

The prognostic significance of primary tumor site in vulvar cancer: a population-based cohort study

To investigate the association of primary tumor site with prognosis in vulvar cancer, stratified by vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and non-SCC histological types. This population-based retrospective study enrolled patients with vulvar cancer from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database between January 2000 and December 2018. The primary outcome was cancer-specific survival (CSS). The prognostic difference between labium majus, labium minus and clitoris groups was investigated using Kaplan-Meier analyses and Cox proportional hazards regression analyses. A total of 3,465 eligible patients with vulvar cancer were included with a mean age of 54.5 years. Among the 1,076 (31.1%) patients with non-SCC, the multivariate Cox regression analyses showed that labium minus-sited disease (hazard ratio [HR]=1.85; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.27-2.71; p=0.001) and clitoris-sited disease (HR=2.37; 95% CI=1.47-3.85; p0.05). Kaplan-Meier analyses also showed that the primary tumor site had a significant prognostic effect in vulvar non-SCC (p<0.001) but not in vulvar SCC (p=0.330). Among vulvar non-SCC, patients with labium minus-sited disease had a significantly worse prognosis than those with labium majus-sited disease, and a significantly better prognosis than those with clitoris-sited disease. Gynecologic oncologists should consider the prognostic effect of primary tumor site in vulvar non-SCC, and make optimal, personalized treatment and surveillance strategies based on different primary tumor sites.

1Papers
6Collaborators