1. Is There a Survival Advantage in Diagnosing Endometrial Cancer in Asymptomatic Patients? A Systemic Review and Meta-analysis
- Author
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Ofer Lavie, Lena Dain-Sagi, Yakir Segev, Ofer Gemer, and Shlomi Sagi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Disease ,Original research ,Asymptomatic ,Disease-Free Survival ,Endometrium ,03 medical and health sciences ,Polyps ,0302 clinical medicine ,Statistical significance ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Survival advantage ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Ultrasonography ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Endometrial cancer ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Meta-analysis ,Relative risk ,Asymptomatic Diseases ,Female ,Uterine Hemorrhage ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Data supporting a survival advantage of endometrial cancer diagnosed before the onset of postmenopausal bleeding are lacking. This study sought to compare overall survival and disease recurrence between women who were asymptomatic at diagnosis and women who were symptomatic at diagnosis. A systemic search was conducted in databases using the terms: "asymptomatic," "ultrasound," "screening," and "endometrial cancer." Only original research studies that compared characteristics of tumour advancement and survival measures were included. The six articles included in the meta-analysis comprised 2961 patients. Data were collected on study design and period, number and characteristics of participants, and outcomes in terms of tumour histology and survival measures. Higher rates of stage I tumours were shown among asymptomatic patients (relative risk 1.19). The proportion of high-grade histology did not differ between the two groups (relative risk 0.92). The crude pooled estimate for overall survival did not yield statistical significance, nor did recurrence-free survival (which was reported by three studies). In conclusion, endometrial cancer diagnosed in asymptomatic women is not associated with higher survival than in symptomatic women. Invasive procedures in asymptomatic women with incidental ultrasonographic findings should be carefully weighed because no survival advantage is expected.
- Published
- 2020