Six years after the first edition of The Guideline for Gynecological Practice, which was jointly edited by The Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology and The Japan Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the third revised edition was published in 2017. The 2017 Guidelines includes 10 additional clinical questions (CQ), which brings the total to 95 CQ (12 on infectious disease, 28 on oncology and benign tumors, 27 on endocrinology and infertility and 28 on healthcare for women). Currently a consensus has been reached on the Guidelines and therefore the objective of this report is to present the general policies regarding diagnostic and treatment methods used in standard gynecological outpatient care that are considered appropriate. At the end of each answer, the corresponding recommendation level (A, B, C) is indicated.
It has been reported that abnormal mitotic figures (AMFs) occur principally in aneuploid lesions and that aneuploidy is a diagnostic feature of nonsndocrine-dependent epithelial cancer precursors and cancers. Recently, AMFs have been reported in cervical lesions interpreted as flat condylomata, and it has been suggested by several authors that AMFs may not be diagnostic or aneuploidy or neoplasia, particularly in human papillomavirus-(HPV)induced lesions. Although it is conceivable that AMFs may be a regular feature of HPV infection, their association with cytologic atypia and their presence in higher grades of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) suggests that AMFs may herald the presence of a different lesion than the pure flat condyloma. In the current study, koilocytotic cervical lesions thought to be HPV-induced were examined microscopically for the presence of AMFs, and the findings were correlated with the presence of HPV as determined by immunoperoxidase and nuclear DNA distribution patterns as measured by Feulgen microspectrophotometry. In unselected lesions originally diagnosed as flat cervical condylomata, AMFs were surprisingly common (22.6%). and did not correlate with the extent of koilocytosis. Immunoperoxidase (IMPO) stains were performed in 35 cases with AMFs, and were negative for HPV in 74.3% and positive in 22.8%. However, among the cases evaluated by IMPO, there was an inverse relationship between the presence of mitotic abnormalities and the expression of HPV antigen. Nine of 11 (81.8%) lesions containing AMFs were aneuploid, and 2 of 11 (18.2%) were polyploid. Abnormal mitotic figures have a range of morphology and frequency in koilocytotic cervical lesions. Although the biology of these lesions is not well-defined, the presence of AMFs may identify a subgroup of HPV-induced cervical atypias which represent a transition between flat cervical conylomata and CIN.Cuncer 53:1081-1087, 1984.
UMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS (HPV) infection of the cer-H vix is increasingly becoming recognized as a major health problem in young women, in whom it has twice the prevalence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and accounts for nearly 3% of abnormal Papanicolaou (Pap) smears.',' In addition to the problem of the man-Supported, in part, by Grant lPOl A1 16959.
These data suggest that despite suppression by progesterone, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase expression in endometrial stromal cells may increase during decidualization due to stimulation by interferon-gamma secreted by infiltrating leukocytes.
5013 Background: NAC may represent an alternative to conventional RH for locally advanced cervical cancer. We compared NAC followed by RH with RH for bulky stage I/II cervical cancer. Methods: Patients (pts) with stage IB2, IIA (> 4 cm), or IIB squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix were randomly assigned to receive either BOMP (bleomycin 7mg day 1–5, vincristine 0.7mg/m2 day 5, mitomycin 7mg/m2 day 5 and cisplatin 14 mg/m2 day 1–5,) q21 days, 2 to 4 cycles followed by radical hysterectomy (NAC arm) or undergo RH (RH arm). Pts with positive surgical margins, metastatic nodes, infiltration to parametrium, and/or deep myometrial invasion received postoperative irradiation. Eligibility included preserved organ function, aged 20–70, and Performance Status 0 or 1. Primary endpoint was overall survival (OS) to be compared by log-rank test. Assuming 100 eligible pts in each arm, the study had 80% power to detect a 15% increase in 5-year survival at 0.05 one-sided alpha. Results: 134 pts (67 NAC, 67 RH) were randomized between 12/01 and 08/05. The first planned interim analysis was performed in July 2005 using data from 108 pts registered as of 11/04. Data and Safety Monitoring Committee recommended to terminate the study because overall survival in NAC arm was inferior to that in RH arm (HR 2.11, multiplicity adjusted 99% CI 0.34 to 13.2) and the predictive probability of significant superiority using Spiegelhalter’s method of NAC arm was extremely low (6.4%). No increase of operability and no decrease of surgery-related morbidity were observed in NAC arm. Response Rate of NAC was 61% (33 of 54) using RECIST criteria. One-year progression-free survival and overall survival, updated as of 05/05, were 69.9% and 91.8% (95% CI 84.1–99.6) in NAC arm and 78.6% and 95.4% (95% CI 89.1–100) in RH arm respectively. Conclusions: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy with BOMP regimen followed by radical hysterectomy did not demonstrate clinical benefit, and conventional radical hysterectomy still remains to be a standard treatment option for bulky stage I/II cervical cancer. [Table: see text]
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