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Fertility Sparing in Gynecological Cancers

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Title: Fertility Sparing in Gynecological Cancers


1
Fertility Sparing in Gynecological Cancers
  • Firat Ortaç, MD
  • Güven Hospital
  • Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

2
  • Cancer Treatment

Objective
  • Adverse Effects
  • Psychological effects
  • Cosmetic problems
  • Loss of organ function
  • Sexual and reproductive dysfunction

Cure
Fertility sparing surgery
3
Goals of Fertility-Sparing Surgery(FSS)
  • Preservation of reproductive potential
  • Preservation of hormonal function
  • Preservation of healthy body image
  • No compromise in curability

4
FSS Objectives
  • Similiar oncologic outcomes to standard therapy
  • Favorable obstetric outcome
  • Benefits gt risks
  • Low morbidity

5
  • Defining prognostic factors
  • Evidence-based Data

Physician
Fertility Sparing Surgery
6
Fertility-Sparing in Gynecologic Oncology
  • The patient and family must be
  • aware of the problem
  • involved in the final decision
  • Once the fertility has been completed, demolitive
    procedure should be considered

7
Fertility-Sparing in Gynecologic Oncology
  • Age
  • Desire to preserve fertility
  • Tumor factors
  • Histologic type, grade, others
  • Stage of disease

8
Principles in Treatment of Early-Stage Cervical
Cancer
  • Patients general status
  • Desire of fertility
  • Tumor factors
  • Depth and width of invasion
  • Size of cervical lesion
  • LVSI

9
Traditional treatment of early stage cervical
cancer beyond micro-invasion
Radical hysterectomy PPLND
Loss of fertility
10
LVSI
Pelvik lenf nodu metastazi
Pelvik rekürens
Lenfadenektomi Radikal cerrahi
11
Spread of Cervical Cancer
  • Laterally (Dominant) ? Parametrium
  • Vertically (rare)
  • Stage Ib and IIa ? 0
  • Stage IIb ? 20

12
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Early-Stage
Cervical Cancer
IDlt3 mm LVSI(-)
CONIZATION
MARGIN (-)
FOLLOW-UP
13
Cold Conization
14
CONIZATION lt 10 mm
  • Does not affect fertility potential

Clin. Exp. Obstet. Gynecol, 1992 19(1)40-2
15
Effect of Con on Pregnancy Outcome
lt 15 mm NO EFFECT
Frencezy A, 1995 Haffenden DK, 1993 Tan L, 2004
lt 18 mm
gt 15 mm
25 PRETERM LABOR 18 PROM
Sadler L. Et al., Am J Med Ass, 2004
gt 18 mm
16
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Early-Stage Cervical
CancerStage Ia1 (LVS )Stage Ia2 (LVS ?)Stage
Ib-IIa (?2cm)
Desire of fertility
Lymph Node Dissection (L/S, L/T)
Node ()
Node (-)
Sentinel Lymph Node
RT
RAT
RVT
17
Sentinel lymph node
18
Radical Trachelectomy
1994 ?Dargent
19
Vaginal Radical Trachelectomy (VRT)inEarly-Stage
Cervical Cancar
  • by Dargent in Lyon, France
  • Modification of the Schauta-Stoeckel technique of
    vaginal radical hysterectomy

Preservation of the upper endocervix and uterine
corpus
L/S Pelvic lymphadenectomy
20
Radical Trachelectomy(RT)
21
VRT-AbRT
  • Indications
  • Patient who desires preservation of fertility
  • FIGO Stage Ia1 (LVSI), Ia2, Ib1
  • Lesions ? 2 cm in diameter
  • Limited endocervical involvement
  • - MRI and colposcopy

22
Surgical procedure
  • Lymph node dissection(Sentinel lymph node)
  • Parametrectomy
  • Trachelectomy (FS analyse- free margin 5-8 mm)
  • Cervical circlage

23
RT
  • Feasibility
  • No evidence of lymph node metastasis (Frozen
    section at L/S)(ultrastaging)
  • Upper endocervical margins free of tumor (Frozen
    section)

24
VRT
  • Results
  • Dargent (Lyon) 82
  • Plante and Roy (Quebec) 44
  • Covens (Toronto) 58
  • Shepherd (London, UK) 40
  • Total 224

25
VRT
  • Oncologic Outcome (N24)
  • Follow-up (months) 30
  • Recurrences 7(3.1)
  • Parametrium 3
  • Pelvic side wall 1
  • Distant 3
  • No cervico-uterine recurrence

26
Pregnancy Results after VRT
n Fertility Desire No.of Pregn/ Patient Livebirth
96 42 56/33 34
72 42 48/31 28
93 39 22/18 18
30 13 14/8 9
19 4 4/3 2
10 4 4/4 2
315 144 148/97 93

Fertil Steril 200584156
27
VRT
  • Conclusions
  • Abdominal way is possible
  • The risk of recurrence is unchanged
  • Fertility is preserved
  • But pregnancies are at high risk
  • An international study is required to confirm
    indications and limits of this conservative
    technique

28
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • 2 -14 of endometrial cancer

? 40 years
Up to 25 PCOS
G1 Early stage
Respond to progestin treatment
29
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • Stage Ia, G1

Standart treatment
TAH BSO
30
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • Endometrial Cancer

Fertility Desire
Pretreatment Evaluation
Tumor Grade
Depth of MI
Tumor Size
Hormone receptor status
Flow cytometric analysis
Favorable prognosis
31
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • Inclusion Criteria
  • Age lt 40 years
  • Nulliparous status
  • Endometrioid Carcinoma
  • G1
  • Presence of PgR
  • Normal serum levels of CA 125 (lt35 u/mL) and CEA
    (lt 5 ng/mL)
  • Tumor DNA index lt 1.3
  • Absence of MI or extrauterine spread (by vaginal
    USG and MRI) ,surgical staging

32
Pretreatment Evaluation
  • History (infertility...)
  • Physicial Examination
  • TVUSG
  • DC
  • Abdominopelvic/ endovajinal coil MRI
  • Ca-125

Laparoscopic evaluation
Response to Progesterone
or
Staging Laparotomy
33
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • Explain the patient the risk of conservative
    treatment
  • Evaluate the patient for prognosis
  • Medical treatment (Megestrol acetate 40-160 mg/d
    , MPA 30 mg/d ? Tamoxifen 30 mg/d or GnRHa)
  • Repeated DC hysteroscopy (tubal blockage)
  • No residual disease
  • Assisted reproduction
  • Elective hysterectomy when the patient no longer
    desires to maintain fertility

34
Progestogenic Agents
  • MPA 30/mg/ day
  • Megace 40-160 /mg/day
  • IUD / Prog
  • Response Rate
  • Hyperplasia with Atypia 83-94
  • End. Ca
    57-75.6
  • Duration of Treatment
  • Range 3-6
    months
  • Median 9
    months
  • Recurrens
  • Hyperplasia with Atypia 13
  • End. Ca
    11-50

35
There is no consensus
  • Which progesterone formulation to use
    What schedule
    to use What dose to use
    How long to treat
    How often to resample

36
Preserving Fertility in Endometrial Cancer
  • 72 cases in literature

Positive response histologically documented 55
cases (76)
37
Endometrial Cancer
  • Literature Overview (1966-2006)
  • No pts. 53
  • 80 were nulliparous
  • In 96 of them the tumor was well differentiated
  • At least 36 pregn. were obtained by ART
  • 70 of pts. Underwent a hysterectomy after
    completing gestation

38
Uterine Leiomyosarcoma (LMS)
  • Diagnosis
  • Pre-operative?
  • Intra-operative frozen section?
  • Histopathological evaluation of hysterectomy or
    myomectomy specimen.

39
Uterine LMS
  • Incidence

patients operated for presumed leiomyoma
0.1-0.3
40
Fertility Sparing Surgery in LMS
  • Safe margin 3-5 mm. ?
  • lt10 mitoses/per 10 HPF
  • Solitary pedinculated mass

41
Fertility Sparing Surgery in LMS
  • Accurately restage the patients
  • Color doppler USG
  • Hysteroscopy
  • Chest X-ray
  • MRI or CT scan

42
Fertility Sparing Surgery in LMS
  • Delivery
  • Cesarean section
  • Multiple uterine biopsies should be taken.

43
Fertility Sparing Surgery in LMS
Lissoni A (Gynecol Oncol 70(3) 348-50 (1998)
  • Between 1982-1996 (8 patients)
  • Median age 29
  • All nulliparous
  • Tumor was confined to myoma
  • Mean mitotic count 6 per 10 HPF
  • 3 pregnancies
  • Median follow-up 42 months
  • 7 patients alive
  • One patient died (26 months after diagnosis).

44
Fertility Sparing in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer
and Borderline Tumors
45
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Epithelial Ovarian
Cancer and Borderline Tumors
  • Optimal Staging
  • USO or cystectomy (in BOT)
  • Peritoneal washing and cytology
  • Inspection of the contralateral ovarian surface,
    biopsies of any suspicious lesions
  • Wedge resection of the opposite ovary?
  • Staging biopsies of the peritoneal cavity
  • Sampling of retroperitoneal lymph nodes or
    radical lymphadenectomy since 1990
  • Omentectomy, appendectomy.

46
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Borderline Tumors
  • Recurrence rate in the patients underwent
    conservative surgery for border-line tumors is 7

Gynecol Oncol 55552-6, 1994.
47
Border-line Tumors of the Ovary Conservative
Management and Pregnancy Outcome
Cancer 1998 Jan, 182(1)141-6
  • Retrospective review
  • 82 patients
  • 39 patients underwent conservative management
  • Three patients had a contralateral recurrence
    (7)
  • 22 pregnancies were achieved.

48
Invasive Epithelial Ovarian Cancer and
Border-Line Tumors
Desire for fertility
Endometrial biopsy
Optimal Staging
FROZEN
  • Stage Ic-III
  • Selected cases
  • Requested by patients herself
  • Preliminary reports.

Stage Ia G1 and Border-line
Stage Ia G2, G3
No further treatment
Chemotherapy
49
  • Can conservative surgical approach be used in
    selected young patients with ovarian cancer who
    would usually undergo radical operations.
  • Cancer 1998 Jan, 182(1)141-6
  • Retrospective study between 1980-1994
  • 10 patients with high grade or limited
    extraovarian disease
  • Stage Ia G3 2
  • Stage Ic 2
  • Stage IIIa 2
  • Stage IIIc 4
  • All patients were given adjuvant CT
  • All patients were alive median follow-up 70
    months
  • 9 patients were menstruating regularly
  • Three had became pregnant.

50
Ovarian Cancer Treatment with Fertility-Sparing
Therapy
  • Stage IA and IC epithelial ovarian cancer
  • 1965 to 2000, n52
  • 20 (38) received chemotherapy
  • 9 (17) eventual TAH
  • 5(10) recurred, 2 died
  • 24 (46) attempted, 17 (33) conceived
  • 26 term, 5 SAb
  • ?33 take home baby

Schilder et al., Gynecol Oncol, 2002
51
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Epithelial Ovarian
Cancer and Borderline Tumors
  • CONCLUSIONS
  • For more advanced stages, additional
    investigation is needed.
  • After completion of fertility, residual ovary
    should be taken out.
  • Incidence of ovarian cancer gets higher with age.
  • Screening method are unreliable.

52
Germ Cell Tumors of the Ovary
  • Incidence less than 5 of all ovarian neoplasm.
  • Age the first and second decade
  • Usually unilateral

53
FSS in Germ Cell Tumors of the Ovary
  • 1978 Forney first reported a case of successful
    pregnancy in a 18 year-old with EST of ovary.
  • Obstet Gynecol 52, 360-62 (1978)
  • 1985 Gershenson at the MD Anderson Hospital.
  • 48 patients with malignant germ cell tumors
  • Full-term pregnancies in 6 cases
  • Cancer 56, 2756-2761 (1985)

54
FSS in Germ Cell Tumors of the Ovary
  • Rationales
  • Unilaterality of tumor
  • Improvement of prognosis by modern combination
    chemotherapy
  • 1970s the VAC regimen
  • 1980s the PVB regimen
  • POMP/ACE.

55
Treatment of Malignant Ovarian Germ Cell Tumors
With Preservation of Fertility
A Report of 28 Cases / Cancer 42, 1152-1160 (1978)
  • Tumor was confined to one ovary in all cases.
  • All patients were taken chemotherapy except two
    with stage I immature teratoma.
  • More than 5 years survival in 13 cases (59.1)
  • 7 of 12 married patients, became pregnant, all
    had term delivery.

56
Obstetric
Outcome in GCT
Author Pregnancy Term Delivery Abort. Ektopic Anomaly
Gershenson 1988 100 (12/16) 22 0 0 0
Perrin 1999 ------ 8 -- -- 0
Low 2000 95 (19/20) 16 -- -- 0
Zanetta 2001 80 (16/20) 26 9 -- 3
Tangir 2003 76 (25/33) 38 2 -- 0
Toplam 87.75 (72/89) 110 11 0 3
57
Fertility Sparing Surgery in Germ Cell Tumors of
the Ovary
  • Conclusion
  • Regardless of the stage is a safe and
    practicable procedure in the absence of
    involvement of CONTRALATERAL OVARY AND UTERUS

58
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59
History of ART
  • The new millenium
  • 2001 Clinic Specific Success about 28 per cycle
    overall
  • Oocyte and ovarian slice cryopreservation with
    function (Oktay)
  • Invitro maturation matures

60
Lancet, March 13, 2004
61
Fertility Preservation Strategies
62
As we discover what can be done, we need to learn
what should done
63
Thank you
64
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65
Fertility-Preserving Treatment in Endometrial
Adenocarcinoma
  • Stage IA, grade 1, 1991-9
  • N9, average 32 years
  • Megace, tamoxifen, GnRHa
  • 8 CR, 1 TAH
  • 4 pregnant
  • 2 term after ART, 2 ectopic
  • 22 take home baby

Wang et al., Cancer, 2002
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