abstract
BACKGROUND:
The clinical impact of
lympho-vascular space invasion (LVSI) in early-stage
ovarian
clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) is not well understood. Given the distinct
tumor biology and survival patterns of OCCC, the significance of LVSI on
survival outcome and treatment response was examined in OCCC.
METHODS:
A
multicenter study was conducted to examine stage
IA-IC3 OCCC cases that
underwent primary surgical staging including lymphadenectomy. LVSI
status was determined from archived histopathology slides, correlated
with clinico-pathological results, chemotherapy patterns, and survival
outcomes.
RESULTS:
LVSI
was observed in 47 (20.3%) among 232 cases. In univariate analysis,
LVSI was associated with older age (p=0.042), large tumor size
(p=0.048), and stage IC (p=0.035). In survival analysis, LVSI was
associated with decreased disease-free survival (DFS, 5-year rate, 70.6%
versus 92.1%, p=0.0004) and overall survival (OS, 78.8% versus 93.3%,
p=0.008) on univariate analysis. After controlling for age, tumor size,
stage, and chemotherapy use, LVSI remained an independent prognostic
factor for decreased survival outcomes (DFS, hazard ratio [HR] 4.35, 95%
confidence interval [CI] 1.73-10.9, p=0.002; and OS, HR 4.73, 95%CI
1.60-14.0, p=0.015). Among 210 cases who received postoperative
chemotherapy, while regimen type did not impact survival outcome
regardless of LVSI status (DFS, p=0.63),
the number of administered
cycles showed a survival benefit towards ≥6cycles for patients with
LVSI-positive tumors (DFS p=0.009, and OS p=0.016).
CONCLUSION:
LVSI
is an important marker to predict survival outcome of stage I OCCC.
Regardless of chemotherapy type, patients with stage I OCCC showing LVSI
may benefit from receiving postoperative chemotherapy.
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