Central pathology review in sentix, a prospective observational international study on sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with early-stage cervical cancer engot-cx2

Kristyna Nemejcova, Roman Kocian, Christhardt Kohler, Jiri Jarkovsky, Jaroslav Klat, Alberto Berjon, Radovan Pilka, Borek Sehnal, Blanca Gil-Ibanez, Ezequiel Lupo, Almerinda Petiz, Octavio Arencibiasanchez, Peter Kascak, Fabio Martinelli, Alessandro Buda, Jiri Presl, Marc Barahona, Luc van Lonkhuijzen, Wiktor Szatkowski, Lubos MinarMaja Pakiz, Pavel Havelka, Cristina Zorrero, Marcin Misiek, Leon Corneliussnyman, Dariusz Wydra, Ignace Vergote, Alla Vinnytska, Mikulas Redecha, Martin Michal, Solveig Tingulstad, Barbara Kipp, Grzegorz Szewczyk, Robert Toth, Francisco Javierdesantiagogarcia, Pluvio Jesuscoronadomartin, Robert Poka, Karl Tamussino, Mathieu Luyckx, Maxime Fastrez, Juan Carlosstaringer, Anna Germanova, Andrea Plaikner, Sylva Bajsova, Pavel Dundr, Nina Mallmann-Gottschalk, David Cibula

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The quality of pathological assessment is crucial for the safety of patients with cervical cancer if pelvic lymph node dissection is to be replaced by sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy. Central pathology review of SLN pathological ultrastaging was conducted in the prospective SENTIX/European Network of Gynaecological Oncological Trial (ENGOT)-CX2 study. All specimens from at least two patients per site were submitted for the central review. For cases with major or critical deviations, the sites were requested to submit all samples from all additional patients for second-round assessment. From the group of 300 patients, samples from 83 cases from 37 sites were reviewed in the first round. Minor, major, critical, and no deviations were identified in 28%, 19%, 14%, and 39% of cases, respectively. Samples from 26 patients were submitted for the second-round review, with only two major deviations found. In conclusion, a high rate of major or critical deviations was identified in the first round of the central pathology review (28% of samples). This reflects a substantial heterogeneity in current practice, despite trial protocol requirements. The importance of the central review conducted prospectively at the early phase of the trial is demonstrated by a substantial improvement of SLN ultrastaging quality in the second-round review.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1115
JournalCancers
Volume12
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2020

Keywords

  • Cervical cancer
  • Metastases
  • Sentinel lymph node

Cite this