Clinical Role of Adjuvant Chemotherapy after Radical Hysterectomy for FIGO Stage IB-IIA Cervical Cancer: Comparison with Adjuvant RT/CCRT Using Inverse-Probability-of-Treatment Weighting
Phill-Seung Jung, Dae-Yeon Kim, Shin-Wha Lee, Jeong-Yeol Park, Dae-Shik Suh, Jong-Hyeok Kim, Yong-Man Kim, Young-Tak Kim, Joo-Hyun Nam

TL;DR
The study compares chemotherapy and radiotherapy after surgery for cervical cancer, finding similar effectiveness but fewer long-term side effects with chemotherapy.
Contribution
This study introduces a novel comparison of adjuvant chemotherapy versus radiotherapy using inverse-probability-of-treatment weighting to reduce bias.
Findings
Adjuvant chemotherapy showed non-inferior outcomes compared to radiotherapy in cervical cancer patients.
Chemotherapy was associated with significantly fewer long-term complications like lymphedema and ureteral stricture.
Survival rates were similar between chemotherapy and radiotherapy groups.
Abstract
To evaluate the clinical role of adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) in FIGO stage IB-IIA cervical cancer patients. A cohort of 262 patients with cervical cancer who received radical hysterectomy (RH) and adjuvant therapy at Asan Medical Center between 1992 and 2012 was enrolled. In this cohort, 85 patients received adjuvant chemotherapy (AC), and 177 received adjuvant radiotherapy or concurrent chemoradiation therapy (AR). Oncologic outcomes and adverse events in both treatment arms were compared using weighted Cox proportional hazards regression models with inverse-probability-of-treatment weighting (IPTW) to reduce the impact of treatment selection bias and potential confounding factors. During a 46.8-month median follow-up duration, 39 patients (14.9%) had recurrences, and 18 patients (6.9%) died of disease. In multivariate analysis, the hazard ratio (HR) for recurrence and death was not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEndometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments · Cervical Cancer and HPV Research · Colorectal and Anal Carcinomas
