Conservative re‐treatment of women with atypical endometrial hyperplasia and early endometrial carcinoma: We can hope, at least

Antonio Raffone · 2023-09-29

Abstract

Background

In women with recurrent disease who were conservatively treated for atypical endometrial hyperplasia (AEH) and early endometrial carcinoma (EEC), the reasons why conservative treatment was chosen persist and outcomes of performing a conservative re‐treatment are unclear, as pooled estimates on oncologic outcomes of such a re‐treatment are lacking.

Objectives

To provide pooled estimates of oncologic outcomes of conservative re‐treatment in women with recurrent AEH or EC.

Search Strategy

A systematic review and meta‐analysis was performed by searching six electronic databases from their inception to March 2022.

Selection Criteria

Studies that allowed extraction of data about oncologic outcomes of conservative re‐treatment of women with recurrent AEH and EEC after a conservative treatment.

Data Collection and Analysis

Pooled prevalence of complete response (CR), poor response (PR), and recurrence after conservative re‐treatment was calculated.

Main Results

Fifteen studies (12 retrospective and 3 prospective) with 492 women (42.1% AEH and 57.9% EEC) were included in the systematic review, and 10 studies (8 retrospective and 2 prospective) were suitable for the meta‐analysis. Pooled prevalence was 85.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 77.0%–91.0%) for CR, 14.7% (95% CI 9.0%–23.0%) for PR, and 40.4% (95% CI 15.5%–71.4%) for recurrence.

Conclusions

Conservative re‐treatment in AEH or EC recurrent women has a high CR rate and acceptable recurrence rate that might allow it to be considered a safe and viable option, at least as a first round of conservative treatment. Women with an unsatisfied desire for motherhood or with high surgical risk might avoid hysterectomy and attempt childbearing or spare high‐risk surgery.