The purpose of our study was to determine if frozen-section diagnosis accurately identified patients suffering from endometrial adenocarcinoma FIGO stage I for surgical staging consisting of total abdominal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, peritoneal cytology, and complete bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy in moderately differentiated tumors with myometrial invasion. In all poorly differentiated tumors, and in all tumors with deep myometrial invasion (more than 50%) surgical staging included additional para-aortic lymphadenectomy. We performed a retrospective study including 70 patients. Frozen-section diagnosis of myometrial invasion and tumor grade was compared with permanent-section diagnosis. The accuracy rates were determined, and compared with accuracy rates of frozen-section diagnosis in the literature, and a total accuracy rate for 624 patients suffering from stage I endometrial adenocarcinoma was evaluated. In our patient collective, the overall accuracy rate of frozen-section diagnosis for myometrial invasion and tumor grade was 80 and 84%, respectively. In the five comparable studies, the mean accuracy rate for myometrial invasion and tumor grade was 89 and 84%, respectively. In combination with the five comparable studies our recent study produced an accuracy rate of frozen-section diagnosis for myometrial invasion and tumor grade of 88 and 84% in 624 patients, respectively. Despite an accuracy level of frozen-section diagnosis for myometrial invasion of 80 and 84% for tumor grade in our patient collective, all patients who required surgical staging were accurately identified.
In a pilot study we investigated the association between concentrations of various eicosanoids in menstrual blood with pain and oral contraceptive use. Menstrual fluid was collected on tampons by 12 women who did not use an oral contraceptive but suffered from slight primary dysmenorrhea and by three pain-free women who used an oral contraceptive. Eicosanoids (cyclooxygenase products: 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha, thromboxane B2, prostaglandin E2, prostaglandin F2 alpha, 13,14-dihydro-15-ketoprostaglandin F2 alpha, 12-hydroxy-heptadecatrienoic acid; lipoxygenase products: 5-, 12-, 15-hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid (HETE), leukotriene B4, leukotriene C4, leukotriene D4, leukotriene E4) and female sex steroids (17 beta-estradiol and progesterone) were analyzed by the combined use of high-performance liquid chromatography and radioimmunoassay. 12-HETE was the main arachidonic acid metabolite. An increased metabolism of arachidonic acid was associated with pain, especially when synthesis of 12-HETE was elevated. Oral contraceptive use decreased the synthesis of prostaglandins as well as leukotrienes. The concordant changes of cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase products in dysmenorrhea or in oral contraceptive use may be explained by an increased or decreased phospholipid metabolism, respectively.
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