Treatment selection for cervical AC should be based on a comprehensive assessment of resource availability. For the purpose of providing evidence-based, resource-stratified global recommendations to policy makers, ASCO takes into account the function of preoperative chemotherapy in areas where resources are limited [19]. Recently, a phase II study showed that dose-dense neoadjuvant paclitaxel/carboplatin is feasible and safe in LACC patients. However, it is unclear how neoadjuvant chemotherapy affects survival [20]. The survival benefit of NACT is currently being evaluated in the EROTC 55994 trial, and thus far, they have found no difference in the 5 year OS between patients receiving NACT + RS and those receiving CCRT [21]. Gupta et al. reported that LACC patients treated with NACT + RS had inferior DFS compared to patients treated with CCRT (P = 0.003); the incidences of adverse events in both groups were within acceptable limits. This prospective study showed a rigorous design and high level of evidence, but they included 179 stage IIB patients who underwent RS, and subgroup analysis showed that the difference was mainly due to these patients [22]. Further, this study included only patients with SCC. As there are differences between AC and SCC in epidemiology, biological characteristics, and chemoradiotherapy sensitivity, the best treatment model for cervical AC is likely not reflected in these clinical trials.
In this retrospective analysis, pathological response criteria were used to evaluate the short-term effects of neoadjuvant therapy. These criteria have been used in many multicenter retrospective analyses and balance the shortage of imaging resources. 10 patients in the NACT + RS group achieved PR (41.7%), as did 20 patients in the NACRT + RS group (52.6%). The pathological response criteria are stricter than the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST), which define PR as residual lesions < 3 mm and no lymph node metastasis. For this reason, PR rates are lower when judged by pathological response criteria. The response rate of neoadjuvant chemotherapy when judged by RECIST criteria fluctuates from 48.4 to 93.0%, and in studies assessing response by pathology, the response rate fluctuates from 27.6 to 30.6% [23, 24]. Several articles also pointed out that pathological response was an indicator for satisfying clinical outcome [16, 25].
Multivariate analysis showed that lymph node metastasis was an independent prognostic factor of survival. The rate of lymph node positivity was 23.1% in our study, and the 5 year survival rate in patients with lymph node metastasis was 37.0%. Baalbergen et al. found that the survival rate in patients with surgically treated stage I–IIB AC was approximately 91% if the lymph nodes were negative, but it dropped to 10–34% if they were positive [26]. Irie et al. found that the incidence of lymph node involvement was significantly higher in patients with AC than in those with SCC (31.6% vs 14.8%) [27]. Mabuchi et al. found that the impact of pelvic nodal metastasis was larger in patients with AC histology than in those with SCC histology (HR: 12.9 versus 3.51), and Cox proportional hazards model indicated a negative response to therapy in AC patients with lymph node metastasis [28].
A number of studies have indicated that AC is not as sensitive as SCC to either radiotherapy or CCRT [10,11,12,13]. Yokoi et al. compared the survival outcomes of AC/ASC and SCC patients receiving definitive radiotherapy and found that the 5 year OS rates were 26.7 and 58.6%, respectively, although that study included only 24 AC/ASC patients [7]. One institution in China matched and compared 744 SCC and 71 AC patients who underwent RT or CCRT. They found that patients with AC were more likely to experience recurrence and had worse survival outcomes than patients with SCC [8]. The smaller number of AC patients may be part of the reason for the difference in survival outcomes. Ryu et al. sought to determine a new criterion that included AC as an intermediate-risk factor for recurrence and found that it was more sensitive and specific when compared to the Classic model or the GOG model (P = 0.0048) [29]. Further, the survival rate of some subtypes of AC may be worse, such as endometrial endometrioid adenocarcinoma, gastric type adenocarcinoma, or clear cell adenocarcinoma. The biological behavior of cervical AC must also be taken into account. Several studies have investigated survival outcomes in cervical AC to determine more appropriate treatment approaches. One possibility is NACT before CCRT. The use of NACT before CCRT followed by adjuvant therapy in patients with AC histology has been reported. Tang et al. compared NACT before CCRT followed by adjuvant therapy with CCRT alone in 880 patients with stages IIB-IVA AC and observed that sandwich chemotherapy is more effective and safe [30].
Patients in the NACRT + RS group who achieved pOR with neoadjuvant treatment still had poor prognosis (Fig. 3c, d). However, in several retrospective studies, neoadjuvant brachytherapy and chemotherapy followed by RS for stage IB2 and IIA cervical cancer patients had no obvious inferiority to NACT + RS [31, 32]. Additionally, Vízkeleti et al. observed that the postoperative response rate in patients who received preoperative intrauterine brachytherapy was higher than that in patients who received RS alone (P = 0.03), and the rate of positive surgical margins was significantly lower (P = 0.02) [33]. This suggests that the underlying reason for our results is that radiotherapy and neoadjuvant brachytherapy reduce the pathological response in cervical AC.
This study has some limitations. We only included a small number of patients, and the retrospective analysis is not sufficiently rigorous to settle the question of the effects of neoadjuvant therapy in IB2/IIA2 cervical cancer. Studies with larger sample sizes and multicenter prospective randomized studies are needed to further determine the role of preoperative adjuvant therapy.
In conclusion, there was no significant difference in survival between cervical AC patients who received NACT + RS and those who received RS alone. Patients who responded to NACT had favorable prognosis, which may suggest that there are subgroups in which neoadjuvant therapy may be beneficial. No survival benefit was observed in the NACRT group, even in responders.