TY - JOUR
T1 - Endometrial adenocarcinoma recurring in the lung
T2 - Impact of molecular profile and role of local therapies on prognosis
AU - Luzarraga Aznar, Ana
AU - Bebia, Vicente
AU - López-Gil, Carlos
AU - Giraldo, Alexandra
AU - Montoya, M. P.
AU - Verges, Ramona
AU - Jauregui, Alberto
AU - Castellvi, Josep
AU - Pérez-Benavente, Assumpció
AU - Colás, Eva
AU - Gil-Moreno, Antonio
AU - Cabrera, Silvia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© IGCS and ESGO 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
PY - 2023/10/1
Y1 - 2023/10/1
N2 - Objectives The objective of our study was to describe the characteristics of patients with endometrial cancer diagnosed with a first recurrence involving the lung, and to describe the prognostic role of the molecular profile. We also aimed to describe the prognostic outcomes after local treatment of recurrence (resection of lung metastases or stereotactic body radiation therapy) in a group of patients with isolated lung recurrence. Methods This was a retrospective, single-center study between June 1995 and July 2021. The study included patients diagnosed with a first recurrence of endometrial cancer involving the lung. We defined two groups of patients: patients with isolated lung recurrence (confined to the lung) and patients with multisystemic recurrence (in the lung and other locations). Results Among 1413 patients diagnosed with endometrial cancer in stage IA to IVA of the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) 2009, 64 (4.5%) patients had a first recurrence involving the lung. Of these, 15 (39.1%) were of a non-specific molecular profile, 16 (25%) were p53-abnormal, 15 (23.4%) were mismatch-repair deficient, and 0% POLE-mutated. P53-abnormal patients had the shortest 3 year progression-free survival after recurrence and those with mismatch-repair deficient had the longest 3 year progression-free survival (14.3% (range; 1.6-40.3) and 47.6% (range; 9.1-79.5) respectively, p=0.001). We found no differences on overall survival after recurrence by molecular profile. Thirty-one of 64 (48.4%) patients had an isolated recurrence in the lung, and 16 (25%) patients received local treatment. When comparing patients with isolated lung recurrence, locally treated patients had a longer median progression-free survival than patients treated systemically (41.9 (range, 15.4-NA) vs 7.8 (range, 7.2-10.6) months respectively, p=0.029), a complete response rate of 80% for stereotactic body radiation therapy and a complete resection of 90.9% for surgery. Conclusion Although few patients will benefit from local treatment (stereotactic body radiation therapy or resection) after a recurrence involving the lung, local therapies might be considered as an option in oligometastatic lung recurrences as they achieve high local control rates and better oncological outcomes than systemic treatment alone.
AB - Objectives The objective of our study was to describe the characteristics of patients with endometrial cancer diagnosed with a first recurrence involving the lung, and to describe the prognostic role of the molecular profile. We also aimed to describe the prognostic outcomes after local treatment of recurrence (resection of lung metastases or stereotactic body radiation therapy) in a group of patients with isolated lung recurrence. Methods This was a retrospective, single-center study between June 1995 and July 2021. The study included patients diagnosed with a first recurrence of endometrial cancer involving the lung. We defined two groups of patients: patients with isolated lung recurrence (confined to the lung) and patients with multisystemic recurrence (in the lung and other locations). Results Among 1413 patients diagnosed with endometrial cancer in stage IA to IVA of the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) 2009, 64 (4.5%) patients had a first recurrence involving the lung. Of these, 15 (39.1%) were of a non-specific molecular profile, 16 (25%) were p53-abnormal, 15 (23.4%) were mismatch-repair deficient, and 0% POLE-mutated. P53-abnormal patients had the shortest 3 year progression-free survival after recurrence and those with mismatch-repair deficient had the longest 3 year progression-free survival (14.3% (range; 1.6-40.3) and 47.6% (range; 9.1-79.5) respectively, p=0.001). We found no differences on overall survival after recurrence by molecular profile. Thirty-one of 64 (48.4%) patients had an isolated recurrence in the lung, and 16 (25%) patients received local treatment. When comparing patients with isolated lung recurrence, locally treated patients had a longer median progression-free survival than patients treated systemically (41.9 (range, 15.4-NA) vs 7.8 (range, 7.2-10.6) months respectively, p=0.029), a complete response rate of 80% for stereotactic body radiation therapy and a complete resection of 90.9% for surgery. Conclusion Although few patients will benefit from local treatment (stereotactic body radiation therapy or resection) after a recurrence involving the lung, local therapies might be considered as an option in oligometastatic lung recurrences as they achieve high local control rates and better oncological outcomes than systemic treatment alone.
KW - Endometrial neoplasms
KW - Neoplasm metastasis
KW - Neoplasm recurrence, local
KW - Radiology, interventional
KW - Surgical oncology
KW - Endometrial neoplasms
KW - Neoplasm metastasis
KW - Neoplasm recurrence, local
KW - Radiology, interventional
KW - Surgical oncology
KW - Endometrial neoplasms
KW - Neoplasm metastasis
KW - Neoplasm recurrence, local
KW - Radiology, interventional
KW - Surgical oncology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85173866837&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/ijgc-2023-004534
DO - 10.1136/ijgc-2023-004534
M3 - Article
C2 - 37726197
AN - SCOPUS:85173866837
SN - 1048-891X
VL - 33
SP - 1564
EP - 1571
JO - International Journal of Gynecological Cancer
JF - International Journal of Gynecological Cancer
IS - 10
ER -