Stage IB cervical carcinoma: a clinical audit

Abstract
All patients with FIGO Stage IB cervical cancer registered with the Department of Clinical Oncology at the Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, during the 6 years from 1979 to 1984 have been reviewed, as part of a continuing programme of clinical audit. Of the 140 patients with Stage IB disease, 68 (49%) were treated by primary surgery of whom 44 (31%) also received adjuvant radiotherapy. Radical radiotherapy was the definitive treatment for 69 patients (49%). Three patients (2%) were not treated with curative intent. The crude 5-year survival rate for all cases was 72% and the cause-specific 5-year survival rate was 78%. Local tumour control at 5 years was 72%. There was no significant difference in outcome between the surgically treated and irradiated groups of patients. Age, histology and nodal status did not influence outcome. Irradiated patients with bulky tumours fared significantly worse than the other patients who received radical radiotherapy. Multivariate analysis of all patients revealed no significant independent prognostic variables. Primary surgery appears to confer no benefit over radical radiotherapy in terms of either survival or local control. Treatment-related late bladder and bowel morbidity was, however, significantly worse in irradiated patients.