Background Recently, the results of a RCT have raised concerns on the management of cervical cancer through a minimally invasive approach. This study reports on the outcomes of patients with early stage cervical cancer submitted to robotics. Methods Retrospective review of a consecutive series of patients with an early cervical cancer treated with robotics at a single Institution over a 9‐year period. Results A total of 91 women were managed; 39 (41.1%) had cervical adenocarcinoma. One (1.1%) conversion to laparotomy and one (1.1%) intraoperative complication occurred. Five (5.5%) patients experienced postoperative (>G2) complications; 24 (26.4%) patients required further adjuvant therapies. After a median follow‐up of 40.7 (3.8‐96.6) months, the DFS and OS were 90.4 (95%CI 85.3‐95.6)% and 94.5 (95%CI 91.8‐97.2)%, respectively. Conclusions According to the available literature, the survival outcomes of this series of RRH for ECC are not inferior to what recorded in the past by an open approach.
e15550 Background: Human epididymis protein 4 (HE4) has been recently described as a new marker for early ovarian cancer, with higher sensitivity (76.9%) compared to CA125. This is the third study in literature on the role of HE4 in recurrence of ovarian cancer and the first evaluating the sensitivity of HE4 and CA125 in these patients Methods: Plasma was obtained 24 hours before secondary cytoreductive surgery from consecutive patients with suspicious recurrence ovarian cancer operated from November 2010 to April 2011 at University Campus Bio-Medico of Rome. CA125 levels were evaluated by a one-step "sandwich" radioimmunoassay. HE4 levels were determined using the HE4 enzymatic immune assay. The CA125 cut-off was less than 35 U/mL. Two cut-off were considered for HE4: less than 150 pmol/L (according to the manufacturer's indications) and less than 70 pmol/L. Results: Fourteen patients were histologically confirmed as recurrence ovarian cancer. Mean Ca125 plasma concentration was 31.95 ± 22.09 U/mL (range 1.1 – 64.3). Mean HE4 plasma concentration was 225.83± 286.82 pmol/L (range 21.61- 633.6). The sensitivity of CA125 was 35.7 %. The sensitivity of HE4 was 71.4% and 28.6% above the cut-off of 70 pmol/L and 150 pmol/L, respectively. The dual marker combination of CA125 and HE4 at 70 pmol/L cut-off yielded the highest sensitivity (85.7%) to detect recurrence ovarian cancer. Conclusions: Even if a standard cut-off point has not been determined, this study suggested that HE4 may potentially be a more sensible marker for recurrence ovarian cancer than CA125 and the association between CA125 and HE4 at cut-off of 70 pmol/L seems to yield the highest sensitivity.
5094 Background: In endometrial cancer, there are no markers routinely used in clinical practice. This study prospectively investigates the sensitivity and specificity of new marker HE4 in detection of endometrial cancer. Methods: Serum samples were prospectively obtained 24 hours before surgery from 25 patients with endometrial cancer and from 25 patients with uterine benign pathology, operated from January 2011 to October 2011 at University Campus Bio-Medico of Rome. Preoperative CA125 levels were evaluated by a one-step “sandwich” radioimmunoassay. HE4 levels were determined using the HE4 enzymatic immune assay. The CA125 normal value is considered less than 35 U/mL. Two HE4 cut-off are considered: less than 70 pmol/L and less than 150 pmol/L. The specificity analysis was performed using the parametric T-Test for comparing the HE4 series and the Mann-Whitney test for the CA125 series. The level of statistical significance is set at p < 0.05. Results: The sensitivity of CA125 in detecting endometrial cancer is 16% whereas the sensitivity of HE4 is 48% and 28 % for 70 pmol/L and 150 pmol/L cut-off respectively. The specificity of HE4 is 100% (positive predictive value = 100%, negative predictive value = 65.79% and 58.14% considering the two HE4 cut-off, respectively), whereas the CA125 specificity is 72 % (positive predictive value = 36.36%, negative predictive value = 46.15%) in detection of endometrial cancer. Conclusions: HE4 has a good sensitivity and a specificity of 100% in detection of endometrial cancer and may be useful for detecting early stage endometrial cancer. In particular the HE4 at cut-off of 70 pmol/L yields the best sensitivity and specificity.
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