Summary. Of 4147 women who had CIN treated by laser at the Regional Gynaecological Oncology Centre, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead, 103 (2.5%) had co‐existing vaginal epithelial abnormalities. CIN 3 was the histological diagnosis most often associated with vaginal lesions. The upper vagina was almost always involved. In 67% the lesion in the cervix appeared to be confluent with that in the vagina. Even when the lesions were confluent, biopsies form the cervical and vaginal components did not always show the same grade of intraepithelial neoplasia and in some biopsies they showed different lesions. Laser treatment appears to be effective for the vaginal lesions and is therefore recommended although, in selected patients, careful follow up alone may suffice.
Twenty-four patients who underwent radical hysterectomy and pelvic node dissection for cervical carcinoma were randomized in a pilot study to compare continuous postoperative drainage by urethral and suprapubic catheters. There were no statistically significant differences in either the duration of continuous catheter drainage before the return of spontaneous voiding or the incidence of urinary tract infection in the two groups. Power calculations reveal that 628 patients require to be entered into each arm of a future study in order to be able to detect the former difference should it exist (alpha = 0.05, beta = 0.2, difference = 16% of one s.d.) and 41 in the latter (alpha = 0.05, beta = 0.2, 92.9% urethral group had UTI, 70% suprapubic group had UTI). We conclude that differences in these objective measures of catheter efficacy and morbidity between the groups, if they exist, are clinically irrelevant. On this basis we suggest that individual gynaecological oncologists should continue to use whichever method of catheter drainage best suits their clinical practice.
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