Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The SOLUTION trial aims to show the efficacy and safety of performing radical hysterectomy by minimally invasive surgery using an endoscopic stapler in patients with cervical cancer stage IB1 (FIGO staging 2009) and thus to prove that minimally invasive surgery is non-inferior to open surgery.
Full description
Cervical cancer is the 4th most common gynecologic cancer and treatment in early stages consists of surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy. Surgical methods are simple or radical hysterectomy and pelvic and para-aortic lymph node dissection either done in an open manner or minimally invasive surgery (robotic or laparoscopic). However, a phase III cinical trial in 2018 comparing the safety and efficacy between minimally invasive surgery and open surgery in performing radical hysterectomy, 'Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer' (LACC), showed that open surgery is safer than minimally invasive surgery. Possible causes of such results are as follows:
Based on the above-mentioned hypothesis, the following methods could be applied to minimize the exposure of tumor cells to the peritoneal cavity.
Although it would be favorable to perform all the forementioned methods, extracorporeal colpotomy is difficult to perform especially in menopausal patients with atrophic vaginitis or patients with no sexual experience. Thus, an alternative method is to use an endoscopic stapler which can simultaneously cut and suture the cervix into a vaginal stump, which can prevent tumor cells from being exposed to the peritoneal cavity.
In conclusion, this clinical trial aims to show the efficacy and safety of performing radical hysterectomy by minimally invasive surgery using an endoscopic stapler in patients with cervical cancer stage IB1 (FIGO staging 2009) and thus to prove that minimally invasive surgery is non-inferior to open surgery.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Females, aged 20 years or older
Histologically confirmed primary squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma or adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix
Patients with FIGO stage IB1 (FIGO staging 2009)
: stromal invasion>5 mm or 7 mm <lesion size ≤4 cm
Patients undergoing either type B or C hysterectomy (Querleu-Morrow classification)
Patients with normal bone marrow, renal and hepatic function
ECOG performance status 0 or 1
Synchronous cancer with no evidence of recurrence during the past 5 years
Informed consent of patient
Exclusion criteria
Any histological type other than squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma or adenosquamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix
Tumor size greater than 4 cm
Patients with FIGO less than stage IA2 or greater than IB2 (FIGO staging 2009)
Patients with evidence of metastatic disease by conventional imaging studies, enlarged pelvic or aortic lymph nodes greater than 2 cm, or histologically positive lymph nodes
Patients in pregnancy
Patients with a history of pelvic or abdominal radiotherapy
Patients with contraindication of surgery (serious concomitant systemic disorders incompatible with the study to be decided at the discretion of the investigator)
Patients who agree to intra-operative lymphatic mapping (IOLM) must not have:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
124 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Jaehee Mun, M.D.; Soo Jin Park, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal