Korean J Obstet Gynecol.
2000 May;43(5):891-896.
Simple Advertent Hysterectomy in the Presence of Invasive Cervical Cancer
Abstract
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To identify significant prognostic factors in patients undergoing simple hysterectomy in the presence of invasive
cervical cancer, the records of 45 patients who had taken such a procedure between 1993 and 1997 were reviewed.
Overall relapse-free survival and 5-year survival rates were 91.1 and 92.1%, respectively. Factors found to be
significantly related to survival were the retrospectively determined stage(p=0.0000), the presence of residual
disease(p=0.0001), and cell type(p=0.0000). By multivariate analysis, factor emerging as significantly detrimental
to survival was the cell type. The presence of residual disease was a marginally significant factor(p=0.067).
The expectations for survival of patients with residual tumor mass and/or with adenocarcinoma after simple hysterectomy
appear to be markedly worse than those with others, so radical reoperation should be considered in those patients.