Chinese Clinical Oncology

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Clinical analysis of postoperative sequential chemoradiotherapy in patients with stage I low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma

CHEN Jiao, KONG Weimin, ZHANG Tongqing,SONG Dan, JIAO Simeng, LI Xia, LIU Yao, SHANG Ruotian.   

  1. Department of Gynecological Oncology, Beijing Obstetrics and Gynecology Hospital, Capital Medical University
  • Received:2016-05-05 Revised:2016-06-14 Online:2016-07-30 Published:2016-07-30
  • Contact: KONG Weimin

Abstract: Objective To investigate the effect of sequential chemoradiotherapy after surgery on survival of patients with stage I low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma(LGESS), and evaluate side effects. MethodsA total of 52 patients were collected from June 1995 to December 2010. Twenty-eight patients received sequential chemoradiotherapy following surgery, and 24 patients received surgery alone as control. Patients in sequential chemoradiotherapy group received 2 cycles of chemotherapy(CYVADIC, VAD or IAP regimen), and then pelvic external radiation was applied with DT of 40-50 Gy. Two cycles of chemotherapy was followed by radiation. The survival and recurrence were evaluated, as well as side effects. ResultsThe median follow-up was 118 months(20-185 months)with the follow-up rate of 92.3%. In 52 patients, 9 cases developed recurrence, with 7 cases relapsed in control group. The 5,10year recurrencefree survival rates were 96.4% and 91.4% in sequential chemoradiotherapy after surgery group, higher than 75.0% and 70.3% in control group(P=0.035);the 5,10year overall survival rates had no statistical difference between the two groups(P>0.05). All 28 patients with sequential chemoradiotherapy completed treatment. The chemotherapyrelated toxic effects were mainly gastrointestinal reactions and hematologic toxicities, and the gastrointestinal reactions were all grade 1 or 2. Thirteen patients experienced hematologic toxicities and grade 3 or 4 hematologic toxicities were observed in 5 patients, which could recovered after expectant treatment. The radiation reaction was mainly radiation proctitis and vaginitis of grade 1 or 2. No acute grade 3 or 4 radiation toxicities were observed. There was no treatment-related death. Conclusion LGESS has good prognosis, but it is with a tendency to develop late recurrence, even for stage Ⅰ patients. The main treatment is surgery. Sequential chemoradiotherapy after surgery is suggested to reduce the pelvic recurrence, and the toxic effects can be well tolerated.

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