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Technique for inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in vulvar cancer: an international survey

Technique for inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in vulvar cancer: an international survey
Technique for inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in vulvar cancer: an international survey
Background: vulvar cancer is a rare disease and despite broad adoption of sentinel lymph node mapping to assess groin metastases, inguino-femoral lymph node dissection still plays a role in the management of this disease. Inguino-femoral lymph node dissection is associated with high morbidity, and limited research exists to guide the best surgical approach.

Objective: to determine international practice patterns in key aspects of the inguino-femoral lymph node dissection technique and provide data to guide future research.

Methods: a survey addressing six key domains of practice patterns in performing inguino-femoral lymph node dissection was distributed internationally to gynecologic oncology surgeons between April and October 2020. The survey was distributed using the British Gynecological Cancer Society, the Society of Gynecologic Oncology, authors' direct links, the UK Audit and Research in Gynecology Oncology group, and Twitter.

Results: a total of 259 responses were received from 18 countries. The majority (236/259, 91.1%) of respondents reported performing a modified oblique incision, routinely dissecting the superficial and deep inguino-femoral lymph nodes (137/185, 74.1%) with sparing of the saphenous vein (227/258, 88%). Most respondents did not routinely use compression dressings/underwear (169/252 (67.1%), used prophylactic antibiotics at the time of surgery only (167/257, 65%), and closed the skin with sutures (192 74.4%). Also, a drain is placed at the time of surgery by 243/259 (93.8%) surgeons, with most practitioners (144/243, 59.3%) waiting for drainage to be less than 30–50 mL in 24 hours before removal; most respondents (66.3%) routinely discharge patients with drain(s) in situ.

Conclusion: our study showed that most surgeons perform a modified oblique incision, dissect the superficial and deep inguino-femoral lymph nodes, and spare the saphenous vein when performing groin lymphadenectomy. This survey has demonstrated significant variability in inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in cases of vulvar cancer among gynecologic oncology surgeons internationally.
1048-891X
817-823
Jones, Sadie Esme Fleur
9df9a431-b043-48ce-8884-f12ea2aa43c2
Ramirez, Pedro T.
73d2c9c8-8cc9-40d2-95d7-01a03db98528
Bhandoria, Geetu Prakash
3a487e9f-edfd-45e1-959c-97795d7408be
Hsu, Heng-Cheng
43056b36-fca6-4410-a5ba-11c32da16111
Nair, Navya
d3e3842d-a37c-45b8-8daf-931e9be6014a
Noll, Florencia
f5d92a44-2b8a-4c78-9daa-2356af9c6a2f
Hurt, Christopher N.
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Howells, Robert
e449af14-47f5-4af5-83e2-a3141df592a9
Lim, Kenneth
a6af5ac1-4695-4a78-a7b5-65b8e20d9ebf
Sharma, Aarti
6c66382f-6975-4b7f-93f8-6323a2ada50d
Jones, Sadie Esme Fleur
9df9a431-b043-48ce-8884-f12ea2aa43c2
Ramirez, Pedro T.
73d2c9c8-8cc9-40d2-95d7-01a03db98528
Bhandoria, Geetu Prakash
3a487e9f-edfd-45e1-959c-97795d7408be
Hsu, Heng-Cheng
43056b36-fca6-4410-a5ba-11c32da16111
Nair, Navya
d3e3842d-a37c-45b8-8daf-931e9be6014a
Noll, Florencia
f5d92a44-2b8a-4c78-9daa-2356af9c6a2f
Hurt, Christopher N.
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Howells, Robert
e449af14-47f5-4af5-83e2-a3141df592a9
Lim, Kenneth
a6af5ac1-4695-4a78-a7b5-65b8e20d9ebf
Sharma, Aarti
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Jones, Sadie Esme Fleur, Ramirez, Pedro T., Bhandoria, Geetu Prakash, Hsu, Heng-Cheng, Nair, Navya, Noll, Florencia, Hurt, Christopher N., Howells, Robert, Lim, Kenneth and Sharma, Aarti (2021) Technique for inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in vulvar cancer: an international survey. International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer, 31, 817-823. (doi:10.1136/ijgc-2021-002452).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: vulvar cancer is a rare disease and despite broad adoption of sentinel lymph node mapping to assess groin metastases, inguino-femoral lymph node dissection still plays a role in the management of this disease. Inguino-femoral lymph node dissection is associated with high morbidity, and limited research exists to guide the best surgical approach.

Objective: to determine international practice patterns in key aspects of the inguino-femoral lymph node dissection technique and provide data to guide future research.

Methods: a survey addressing six key domains of practice patterns in performing inguino-femoral lymph node dissection was distributed internationally to gynecologic oncology surgeons between April and October 2020. The survey was distributed using the British Gynecological Cancer Society, the Society of Gynecologic Oncology, authors' direct links, the UK Audit and Research in Gynecology Oncology group, and Twitter.

Results: a total of 259 responses were received from 18 countries. The majority (236/259, 91.1%) of respondents reported performing a modified oblique incision, routinely dissecting the superficial and deep inguino-femoral lymph nodes (137/185, 74.1%) with sparing of the saphenous vein (227/258, 88%). Most respondents did not routinely use compression dressings/underwear (169/252 (67.1%), used prophylactic antibiotics at the time of surgery only (167/257, 65%), and closed the skin with sutures (192 74.4%). Also, a drain is placed at the time of surgery by 243/259 (93.8%) surgeons, with most practitioners (144/243, 59.3%) waiting for drainage to be less than 30–50 mL in 24 hours before removal; most respondents (66.3%) routinely discharge patients with drain(s) in situ.

Conclusion: our study showed that most surgeons perform a modified oblique incision, dissect the superficial and deep inguino-femoral lymph nodes, and spare the saphenous vein when performing groin lymphadenectomy. This survey has demonstrated significant variability in inguino-femoral lymph node dissection in cases of vulvar cancer among gynecologic oncology surgeons internationally.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 May 2021
Published date: 7 June 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488193
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488193
ISSN: 1048-891X
PURE UUID: 25158b51-cc27-4dfa-9a5d-63f37a5d04f3
ORCID for Christopher N. Hurt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1206-8355

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Date deposited: 18 Mar 2024 17:31
Last modified: 15 Jun 2024 02:09

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Contributors

Author: Sadie Esme Fleur Jones
Author: Pedro T. Ramirez
Author: Geetu Prakash Bhandoria
Author: Heng-Cheng Hsu
Author: Navya Nair
Author: Florencia Noll
Author: Christopher N. Hurt ORCID iD
Author: Robert Howells
Author: Kenneth Lim
Author: Aarti Sharma

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