SUCCOR morbidity: complications in minimally invasive versus open radical hysterectomy in early cervical cancer.

Journal: International Journal Of Gynecological Cancer : Official Journal Of The International Gynecological Cancer Society
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the incidence of intra-operative and post-operative complications in open and minimally invasive radical hysterectomy for patients with early-stage cervical cancer.

Methods: Data were collected from the SUCCOR database of 1272 patients with stage IB1 cervical cancer (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO), 2009) who underwent radical hysterectomy in Europe between January 2013 and December 2014. We reviewed the duration of the surgeries, estimated blood loss, length of hospital stay, intra-operative and post-operative complications. The inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years and histologic type (squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, or adenosquamous carcinoma). Pelvic MRI confirming a tumor diameter ≤4 cm with no parametrial invasion and a pre-operative CT scan, MRI, or positron emission tomography CT demonstrating no extra-cervical metastatic disease were mandatory. Outcomes of interest were any grade >3 adverse events, intra-operative adverse events, post-operative adverse events, length of hospital stay, length of operation, and blood loss.

Results: The study included 1156 patients, 633 (54%) in the open surgery group and 523 (46%) in the minimally invasive surgery group. Median age was 46 years (range 18-82), median body mass index 25 kg/m2 (range 15-68), and 1022 (88.3%) patients were considered to have an optimal performance status (ECOG Performance Status 0). The most common histologic tumor type was squamous carcinoma (n=794, 68.7%) and the most frequent FIGO staging was IB1 (n=510, 44.1%). In the minimally invasive surgery group the median duration of surgery was longer (240 vs 187 min, p<0.01), median estimated blood loss was lower (100 vs 300 mL, p<0.01), and median length of hospital stay was shorter (4 vs 7 days, p<0.01) compared with the abdominal surgery group. There was no difference in the overall incidence of intra-operative and post-operative complications between the two groups. Regarding grade I complications, the incidence of vaginal bleeding (2.9% vs 0.6%, p<0.01) and vaginal cuff dehiscence was higher in the minimally invasive surgery group than in the open group (3.3% vs 0.5%, p<0.01). Regarding grade III post-operative complications, bladder dysfunction (1.3% vs 0.2%, p=0.046) and abdominal wall infection (1.1% vs 0%, p=0.018) were more common in the open surgery group than in the minimally invasive surgery group. Ureteral fistula was more frequent in the minimally invasive group than in the open surgery group (1.7% vs 0.5%, p=0.037).

Conclusions: Our study showed that there was no significant difference in the overall incidence of intra-operative and post-operative complications between minimally invasive radical hysterectomy and the open approach.

Authors
Daniel Vázquez Vicente, Felix Boria, Teresa Castellanos, Monica Gutierrez, Enrique Chacon, Nabil Manzour, Jose Minguez, Nerea Martin Calvo, Juan Alcazar, Luis Chiva, Juan Arévalo Serrano, Galina Chakalova, Octavio Arencibia, Tayfun Toptas, David Cibula, Mariana Tavares, Dmytro Golub, Goran Vujić, Herman Haller, Robert Jach, Maximilian Lanner, Minna Maenpaa, Jean-guillaume Feron, Robert Fruscio, Kersti Kukk, Jordi Ponce, Nabil Abdalla, Elif Aksahin, Shamistan Aliyev, Nikola Badzakov, Giorgio Bogani, Cosima Brucker, Laura Cárdenas, Andrea Casajuana, Benito Chiofalo, Gloria Cordeiro, Maria Cuadra, Lukas Dostalek, Fuat Demirkiran, Sergi Fernandez Gonzalez, Annamaria Ferrero, José García, Fabio Ghezzi, Juan Gilabert, Nana Gomes, Elisabete Gonçalves, Virginia Gonzalez, Miriam Guijarro, Gines Hernandez Cortes, Stefan Kovachev, Meelis Leht, Arantxa Lekuona, Milena Mitrovic, Sara Morales, Stamatios Petousis, Sonia Prader, Reeli Saaron, Jens-peter Scharf, Rita Sousa, Taner Turan, Arno Uppin, Ignace Vergote, George Vorgias, Francisco Campillo, Mihai Căpîlna, Ali Kucukmetin, Constantijne Mom, Fabrice Narducci, Dilyara Kaidarova, Robert Poka, Petra L Zusterzeel, Frederic Goffin, Igor Berlev, Margarida Bernardino, Rasiah Bharathan, Vladyslav Sukhin, Özgür Akbayir, Sedat Akgöl, Igor Aluloski, Claudia Andrade, Hélène Bonsang Kitzis, Jorge Cea, Javier Díez, Santiago Domingo, Diego Erasun, Soledad Fidalgo, Gabriel Fiol, Gerhard Gebauer, Frederic Grandjean, Sofía Herrero, Imre Pete, Ioannis Kalogiannidis, Andreas Kavallaris, Lukasz Klasa, Ioannis Kotsopoulos, Michael Mallmann, Gemma Mancebo, Aljosa Mandic, María Martín Salamanca, Alejandra Martinez, Liliana Mereu, Bibiana Morillas, Eva Myriokefalitaki, Natalia Povolotskaya, Artem Stepanyan, Vladimír Študent, Manuela Undurraga, Alicia Vázquez, Vanna Zanagnolo, Denis Querleu, Anna Fagotti, Mario Malzoni, Francesco Raspagliesi, Mehmet Meydanli, Anna Perrone, Dimitrios Tsolakidis, Marcin Jedryka, Jogchum Beltman, Dimitrios Haidopoulos, Iryna Yezhova, Maria Alonso Espias, Rosa Barrachina, Eduard-aexandru Bonci, Pere Cavalle, Pluvio Coronado, Teresa Diniz Costa, Mathias Fehr, Khadra Galaal, Frédéric Guyon, Jolien Haesen, Erbil Karaman, Mathieu Luyckx, Tiermes Marina, Victor Martin, Gesine Meili, Gustavo Mendinhos, Enrique Moratalla, Maja Pakižimre, Laurentiu Pirtea, Alfonso Quesada, Mikuláš Redecha, Fernando Roldan, Philip Rolland, Cosmin-paul Sarac, Špela Smrkolj, Carmen Tauste, Hans Trum, Ignacio Zapardiel
Relevant Conditions

Cervical Cancer, Hysterectomy