Disease-free survival among all patients regardless of follow-up duration occurred in 98% of laparotomy patients and 92% of MIS patients, which translated into a 3.74 hazard ratio (P = .002) for disease recurrence or death among the MIS patients when compared with laparotomy patients. The all-cause mortality rates were 1% in the laparotomy patients and 6% among the MIS patients, a hazard ratio of 6.00 (P = .004). The risk of local or regional recurrences was more than fourfold higher in the MIS patients. A blinded, central panel adjudicated all recurrences identified during the study.
The LACC results “should be discussed with patients scheduled to undergo radical hysterectomy” for cervical cancer, Dr. Ramirez concluded.
The observational data from the National Cancer Database used in the analysis led by Dr. Rauh-Hain came from 2,221 patients hospitalized and treated with radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection at a U.S. center during 2010-2012 for either stage 1A2 or 1B1 cervical cancer. Among these patients, 47.5% underwent MIS, with 79% of those procedures done with robotic assistance, while the other 52.5% underwent open laparotomy, Dr. Rauh-Hain reported. Additional analysis of data from this database by the researchers showed that, although the first report of MIS for radical hysterectomy appeared in 1992, the approach remained largely unused in U.S. practice until 2007, when use of MIS began to sharply rise. By 2010, about a third of radical hysterectomies for cervical cancer involved MIS, and usage increased still further during 2011 and 2012 to produce a nearly 48% rate during the 3-year study period.
The primary endpoint of Dr. Rauh-Hain’s analysis was overall survival following propensity-score matching of the MIS and laparotomy patients using 13 demographic and clinical criteria. The analysis showed 4-year mortality rates of 5.8% among the laparotomy patients and 8.4% among the MIS patients, which calculated to a relatively increased mortality hazard from MIS of 48% (P = .02).