Objective: To evaluate the role of radical hysterectomy in the management of patients with stage II endometrial carcinoma.
Materials: Patients diagnosed between 2004 and 2015, with stage II (based on the revised FIGO staging) endometrial carcinoma who had hysterectomy and regional lymph node surgery were identified in the National Cancer Database. Those who had radical or modified radical (RH), or total hysterectomy (TH) were selected. Overall survival (OS) was assessed with Kaplan-Meier curves and compared with the log-rank test. A Cox model was constructed to evaluate survival after controlling for confounders.
Results: A total of 7552 patients who met the inclusion criteria were identified. Rate of RH was 10.5%. Those who underwent RH had longer hospital stay (median 3 vs 2 days, p < 0.001) and a higher 90-day (1.6% vs 0.8%, p = 0.05) mortality. There was no difference in OS between patients who had RH (n = 712) and SH (n = 5955) (p = 0.62); 5-year survival rates were 77.4% and 76.9%, respectively. After controlling for patient age (<65, ≥65 years), race (white, black, other/unknown), insurance status, presence of comorbidities, tumor size (<5, ≥5 cm, unknown), histology (endometrioid, non-endometrioid), performance of adequate lymphadenectomy, and receipt of adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy, performance of radical hysterectomy was not associated with better survival (HR: 1.01, 95% CI: 0.85, 1.21).
Conclusions: Radical hysterectomy was not associated with a survival benefit in a cohort of patients with stage II endometrial carcinoma.
Keywords: Endometrial cancer; Hysterectomy; Stage II; Uterus.
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