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A multi-center retrospective study of neuroendocrine tumors of the uterine cervix: Prognosis according to the new 2018 staging system, comparing outcomes for different chemotherapeutic regimens and histopathological subtypes.

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OBJECTIVE To analyze the clinical behavior of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) of the uterine cervix, we conducted a multicenter, retrospective study of 193 patients. METHODS We evaluated the prognosis of NETs… Click to show full abstract

OBJECTIVE To analyze the clinical behavior of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) of the uterine cervix, we conducted a multicenter, retrospective study of 193 patients. METHODS We evaluated the prognosis of NETs according to the new International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) staging system, compared the clinical response to different chemotherapy regimens, and compared different histological subtypes of NETS. RESULTS Diagnoses of the subjects were atypical carcinoid tumor (ACT, n = 37), small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNEC, n = 126), large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC, n = 22), and NET, not elsewhere classified (n = 8), according to central pathological review. According to FIGO 2018, 69, 17, 74, and 33 patients were at stage I, II, III, or IV, respectively. Five-year survival was 64.5%, 50.1%, 30.2%, and 3.4% for patients at stage I, II, III and IV. About 40% of patients with stage IIIC1 survived >5 years. On multivariate analyses, locally-advanced disease, para-aortic node metastasis, distant metastasis, and <4 cycles of chemotherapy were associated with poor survival. Histological subtype and pelvic node metastasis had no prognostic significance. Response rates to etoposide-platinum (EP) or irinotecan-platinum (CPT-P) regimens were 43.8% (28/64), but only 12.9% to a taxane-platinum (TC) regimen (4/31). The response rate for ACT was 8.7% (2/23), significantly less than the 36.6% for high-grade neuroendocrine carcinomas (HGNEC: both SCNEC and LCNEC, 41/111). CONCLUSIONS Locally-advanced, extra-pelvic disease and insufficient chemotherapy were independent prognostic factors for cervical NET. HGNEC showed good responses to EP or CPT-P but not TC. Chemotherapy was less effective for ACT, which had a prognosis identical to HGNEC.

Keywords: according new; staging system; prognosis; neuroendocrine tumors; uterine cervix; retrospective study

Journal Title: Gynecologic oncology
Year Published: 2019

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