ObjectiveComparative evaluation of costs and effects of laparoscopic hysterectomy (LH) and abdominal hysterectomy (AH).Data sourcesControlled trials from Cochrane Central register of controlled trials, Medline, Embase and prospective trial registers.Selection of studiesTwelve (randomized) controlled studies including the search terms costs, laparoscopy, laparotomy and hysterectomy were identified.MethodsThe type of cost analysis, perspective of cost analyses and separate cost components were assessed. The direct and indirect costs were extracted from the original studies. For the cost estimation, hospital stay and procedure costs were selected as most important cost drivers. As main outcome the major complication rate was taken.FindingsAnalysis was performed on 2226 patients, of which 1013 (45.5%) in the LH group and 1213 (54.5%) in the AH group. Five studies scored ≥10 points (out of 19) for methodological quality. The reported total direct costs in the LH group ($63,997) were 6.1% higher than the AH group ($60,114). The reported total indirect costs of the LH group ($1,609) were half of the total indirect in the AH group ($3,139). The estimated mean major complication rate in the LH group (14.3%) was lower than in the AH group (15.9%). The estimated total costs in the LH group were $3,884 versus $3,312 in the AH group. The incremental costs for reducing one patient with major complication(s) in the LH group compared to the AH group was $35,750.ConclusionsThe shorter hospital stay in the LH group compensates for the increased procedure costs, with less morbidity. LH points in the direction of cost effectiveness, however further research is warranted with a broader costs perspective including long term effects as societal benefit, quality of life and survival.
The aim of this study was to investigate classical MHC class I and nonclassical MHC (human leukocyte antigen-G [HLA-G]) expression in a large cohort of patients with endometrial cancer, to determine the prognostic value of these cell surface markers and their relation with clinicopathological variables. Tissue microarrays containing epithelial endometrial carcinoma tissue from 554 patients were stained for classical and nonclassical MHC class I using the following monoclonal antibodies: 4H84 (anti-HLA-G), b2-m (anti-beta-2-microglobulin) and HC-10 (MHC class I antigen heavy chain). Expression data were linked to known clinicopathological characteristics and survival. HLA-G upregulation and MHC class I downregulation in neoplastic cells was observed in 40% and 48%, respectively. Nonendometrioid tumor type, advanced stage disease (FIGO stage !II) and poorly or undifferentiated tumors were associated with MHC class I downregulation. Absence of HLA-G expression was independently associated with MHC class I downregulation. In univariate analysis, MHC class I downregulation was a predictor of worse disease-specific survival. Prognostic unfavorable tumor characteristics were correlated with downregulation of MHC class I expression in endometrial cancer cells. Furthermore, downregulated MHC class I has a negative impact on diseasespecific survival, observed in a large cohort of patients with endometrial cancer. As there seems to be a relation between classical and nonclassical MHC class I molecules (HLA-G), further research is warranted to unravel this regulatory mechanism.Endometrial adenocarcinoma is the most common gynecological malignancy in the developed world.1 In The Netherlands, 1,400 women are diagnosed with endometrial cancer each year, of which the majority is an early stage of disease. Prognosis is good in low-stage endometrial cancer (5-year survival International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics [FIGO] Stages I and II: 86% and 66%), but it decreases rapidly in higher stages (5-year survival FIGO Stages III and IV: 44% and 16%).2 Nonendometrioid histological type or Grade 3 endometrioid carcinoma (Type II tumors) have been identified as prognostically worse subgroups.3 Classical surgical approaches in combination with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy have had only limited success in improving the overall survival in Type II endometrial cancer. In future, immunotherapy might fulfill a role in the treatment of endometrial cancer. Additional investigation is warranted to show that the immune system does play a (prognostic) role in this type of cancer. 4,5 Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) Class I expression might be such a cell surface marker with prognostic significance in endometrial cancer, exemplifying the role of the cellular immune system.All human body cells present antigens to the immune system by means of MHC Class I molecules on the cell surface. MHC Class I antigens comprise the classical (Class Ia) human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, -B and -C antigens and the nonclassical (Class Ib) HLA-E...
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