Objective: This prospective trial was designed to access the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical hysterectomy and/or radiation therapy in women with advanced carcinoma of the uterine cervix.
Methods: Thirty women, clinical stages IIb-IVa, were enrolled in this clinical trial. Initial treatment consisted of three cycles of bleomycin, cisplatin, and vincristine administered every 10 days. Depending on the extent of disease after chemotherapy, patients then either underwent radical hysterectomy with bilateral pelvic and periaortic lymphadenectomy or surgical staging. Following review of the surgical findings, tailored radiotherapy was administered.
Results: Only 10 women (34%) had tumor regression from neoadjuvant chemotherapy sufficient to allow radical hysterectomy prior to tailored adjuvant radiotherapy; the remainder received primary radiotherapy after surgical staging. Two-year disease-free survival was 68, 43, and 0% for women with clinical stages II, III, and IV, respectively. Four women experienced acute toxicity from chemotherapy requiring medical intervention and eight women suffered chronic toxicities requiring hospitalization and/or surgery.
Conclusion: The neoadjuvant chemotherapy utilized in this trial was generally ineffective in converting patients from inoperable to operable, had no apparent effect on survival, and was associated with significant toxicity.