Loading…

Comparison among fertility-sparing therapies for well differentiated early-stage endometrial carcinoma and complex atypical hyperplasia

To compare fertility-sparing therapies including oral progestogens, hysteroscopic resection (HR), and the levonorgestrel- releasing intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) in achieving disease regression, recurrence and live birth rate in well differentiate early-stage endometrial carcinoma (eEC) and complex...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Oncotarget 2017-08, Vol.8 (34), p.57642-57653
Main Authors: Zhang, Qing, Qi, Gonghua, Kanis, Margaux J, Dong, Ruifen, Cui, Baoxia, Yang, Xingsheng, Kong, Beihua
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:To compare fertility-sparing therapies including oral progestogens, hysteroscopic resection (HR), and the levonorgestrel- releasing intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) in achieving disease regression, recurrence and live birth rate in well differentiate early-stage endometrial carcinoma (eEC) and complex atypical hyperplasia(CAH). This was a meta-analysis of previous studies focus on the fertility-sparing therapy for well differentiate early-stage endometrial carcinoma (eEC) and complex atypical hyperplasia (CAH). Medline, the Cochrane Library and Embase was searched with the terms and Synonyms: words similar to eEC and CAH with therapies associated with fertility-sparing. The number of all patients accepted fertility sparing therapies, patients got regressed, relapsed and delivered were extracted from each study, and the regression, recurrence, and live birth rate of each study were calculated. The regression, recurrence and live birth rates between each two interventions were compared with the aid of meta-regression in packages of "meta" and "meta for" written in R. Fifty-four studies reported fertility sparing therapies in young women with eEC and CAH were included. Meta-analysis showed that HR followed by progestogens achieved a higher pooled regression (98.06% vs 77.20% < 0.0001) and live birth rate (52.57% vs 33.38%, = 0.0944) and a lower recurrence rate compared with oral progestogens alone (4.79% vs 32.17% = 0.0004). At the same time, the pooled live birth rate (52.57% vs 18.09% =0.0399) of HR followed by progestogens are significantly higher than the LNG-IUS alone. Which no statistical difference in regression (98.06% vs 94.24%; = 0.4098) and recurrence rates (4.79% vs 3.90% = 0.8561) was seen. Of the available fertility-sparing therapeutic options, HR followed by progestogens may be a more effective one.
ISSN:1949-2553
1949-2553
DOI:10.18632/oncotarget.17588