Does a uterine manipulator affect cervical cancer pathology or identification of lymphovascular space involvement? Article Proceedings Paper

cited authors

  • Rakowski, Joseph A., Tran, Tien Anh N., Ahmad, Sarfraz, James, Jeffrey A., Brudie, Lorna A., Pernicone, Peter J., Radi, Michael J., Holloway, Robert W.

abstract

  • Objective. Uterine manipulators are a useful adjunct for robotic-assisted radical hysterectomy (RARH), but some surgeons avoid their use for fear of altering pathology or interpretation of lymphovascular space involvement (LVSI). We retrospectively compared clinico-pathological data and tumor pathology from patients with cervical cancer operated by laparotomy vs. RARH. Methods. Charts from cervical cancer patients who underwent radical hysterectomy from January-1997 to June-2010 were reviewed for tumor histology, grade, FIGO stage, lymph node status, LVSI, depth of invasion, and tumor size. A ConMed V-Care (R) uterine manipulator was used in all robotic cases. H&E stained slides from 20 robotic and 24 open stage IB1 cases with LVSI reported in the original pathology were re-reviewed by a blinded pathologist for analysis of tissue artifacts and LVSI. Results. Two-hundred-thirty-six cases (185 open, 51 robotic) with stages IA2, IB1 and IB2 cervical cancer were reviewed. No significant differences in histology (squamous cell carcinoma, 65% vs. 51%; p = 0.1), 1131 lesion size (<= 2 cm, 62% vs. 61%, p>0.1), LVSI (34% vs. 39%, p>0.1), and depth of stromal invasion (p> 0.1) was found between open and robotic groups. Histologic examination of all 181 cervical carcinomas revealed a higher degree of surface disruption [45% (9/20) vs. 12.6% (3/24), p = 0.038] and artifactual "parametrial carryover" [65% (13/20) vs. 29% (7/24), p = 0.037] in robotic vs. open groups, respectively, but no significant differences in the rate of LVSI. Conclusion. RARH cases that utilized a uterine manipulator did not show any clinico-pathological differences in depth of invasion, LVSI, or parametrial involvement compared to open cases. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Publication Date

  • October 1, 2012

webpage

published in

category

start page

  • 98

end page

  • 101

volume

  • 127

issue

  • 1

WoS Citations

  • 7

WoS References

  • 14