Clinical management of patients with invasive cervical cancer following a negative Pap smear.

1988 
: Among 535 patients with invasive cervical carcinoma seen between January 1975 and June 1986, 26 were found to have developed the disease within six months (65 percent), 35 within 12 months (88 percent), 37 within 13 months (93 percent), and three developed the disease within 17 months after a negative Pap smear. Eighty-eight percent of these 40 patients were under age 40 at diagnosis. Rapidly progressive cancers are highly resistant to radiation therapy. Seven stage IB patients treated only with radiation died within nine to 29 months after initial therapy. By contrast, 15 patients treated by radical hysterectomy and four by radical hysterectomy and post-surgical radiation were alive with no evidence of disease from six to 109 months after surgery (median, 30 months). Six of nine patients with stage II to IV disease treated with radiation have died; the remaining three are alive. One patient is well 14 months after therapy, but two others have developed metastases seven and 12 months after treatment. Surprisingly, 37 of 40 patients had symptoms of pain, bleeding, and discharge at the initial diagnosis, but their physicians had a false sense of security because of a recent negative Pap smear. Early biopsy diagnosis and radical hysterectomy with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy is the most effective management for this cancer.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    11
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []