Summary
En bloc radical vulvectomy with bilateral inguinofemoral lymph node dissection was the standard approach for patients diagnosed with vulvar cancer, regardless of disease extent in the past. This radical surgical approach was with high rates of morbidity and adverse psychological effects and led to insufficient locoregional control rates in patients with locally advanced-stage disease. In recent years, multimodal treatment approaches have been introduced to decrease treatment-related morbidity and increase the locoregional control rates. Radiotherapy (RT) has a major role in the treatment of vulvar cancer. It has been successfully used as an adjuvant approach in patients with high risk of local recurrence after surgery and as a sole local treatment with concomitant chemotherapy in locally advanced disease. In this current review, we will discuss the rationale of RT and provide up-to-date information about the role of RT in the treatment of vulvar cancer.Introduction
Vulvar cancer is a less common malignancy than other gynecologic tumors, comprising 0.53% of all cancers in women, and 5.2% of all gynecological malignancies.[1] Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common histological subtype comprising 80?90% of all cases.[2] Most patients are diagnosed with localized disease and 5-year survival rates in these patients are around 87%. The corresponding 5-year survival rates for patients with lymph node (LN) metastasis on the other hand are only 50%.[3]The International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease updated the terminology used to characterize vulvar lesions as low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion or usual-type vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia due to flat condyloma or human papilloma virus (HPV) 6-11 infection, high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion or uVIN 2-3 due to carcinogenic strains of HPV, and differentiated-type VIN (dVIN) associated with vulvar dermatologic conditions such as lichen sclerosis.[4] uVIN tends to occur in young patients in the third to fifth decades of life, on the contrary, dVIN typically occurs in older patients in the sixth to eighth decades of life.[4] Well-known risk factors for the development of vulvar cancer include increasing age, HPV infection, smoking, multiple sexual partners, and immunosuppression.[5]
Vulvar cancer mainly spreads through direct extension to adjacent structures and the lymphatics, first inguinofemoral followed by pelvic LNs. Prognosis is strongly correlated with LN involvement and depth of invasion (>5 mm). Positive or close (<8 mm) surgical margin, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage, tumor size, tumor localization, lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), and presence of HPV infection are also associated with treatment outcomes.[6-8]
Due to the rarity of vulvar cancer, treatment strategies mainly come from the results of limited number of retrospective studies. Historically, radical surgery including radical vulvectomy and bilateral inguinofemoral LN dissection (IFLND) was the standard surgical approach for patients diagnosed with vulvar cancer, regardless of disease extent. However, due to morbidity, psychological effects of exenterative surgery, and insufficient locoregional control rates in patients with locally advanced-stage disease, multimodal treatment approaches have been developed to decrease treatmentrelated morbidity. Radiotherapy (RT) has a major role in the treatment of vulvar cancer; as a neoadjuvant therapy to improve resectability and provide less radical surgery, as a definitive therapy for an inoperable disease, or as an adjuvant therapy to prevent local-regional recurrences. In this review, we will discuss the rationale of RT in neoadjuvant, definitive, and adjuvant settings.
Treatment of Early-Stage Disease (Stages I-II)
Surgery
Historically, en bloc radical vulvectomy with bilateral
IFLND referred to as "butterfly resection" was the standard
approach for vulvar cancer, regardless of disease
extent.[9] However, this exenterative surgery has serious
postoperative morbidity and psychological sequelae.
IFLND alone has also 21-47% risk of lymphedema.
[10,11] In a Cochrane meta-analysis, it was shown that
radical vulvectomy and radical local excision with an
at least 1 cm tumor free margin had similar low rates
of recurrence and the triple incision technique was as
effective as butterfly resection with less morbidity.[12]
Again, in a study comparing triple incision technique
to butterfly technique by Van der Velden et al.,[13] no
difference was observed in overall survival (OS) and
disease-free survival rates, however, triple incision technique
was found to be an independent prognostic factor
for vulvar recurrences in patients with LN metastasis but
not for inguinal/pelvic recurrences. Burke et al.[14] also
reported that contralateral groin recurrence was a rare
event after unilateral LN dissection in patients with welllateralized
tumors. Today, simple or radical partial vulvectomy
is recommended for T1 or small T2 ( ≤4 cm) tumors
and only ipsilateral inguinofemoral LN evaluation
is recommended in case of well-lateralized tumors.[15]
Lymphatic Staging and Role of RT as Alternative
to IFLND
Vulvar cancer spreads from the vulva to the ipsilateral
superficial inguinofemoral LNs, followed by deep in guinofemoral LNs, and then to the pelvic LNs.[16]
Involvement of contralateral inguinofemoral LNs or
pelvic LNs without the involvement of ipsilateral LNs
is a rare event, however, the risk of contralateral LN
metastases increase with the tumors approaching or
crossing the midline.[17] The frequency of inguinal
LN metastases in surgical series ranges from 6% to
50% depending on the extent of the primary disease.
[18,19] Homesley et al.[20] found that greater tumor
thickness, older age, LVSI, and tumor grade were risk
factors for LN involvement. In one study, perineural
invasion was also shown to be a strong risk factor for
LN metastasis.[19] Ipsilateral LN evaluation is recommended
for well-lateralized (≥2 cm from the midline)
tumors deeper than 1 mm and contralateral LN evaluation
should be added for tumors approaching or crossing
the midline.[15]
For lymphatic staging, sentinel LN biopsy (SLNB) in clinically LN-negative early-stage vulvar cancer has been tested in GROINSS-V-I and GOG 173 trials as a conservative approach instead of IFLND.[21-23] SLNB was found to be safe and effective with less lymphedema and lower groin recurrence rates in patients with tumor-free sentinel LNs.[22,23] The GOG 173 trial showed that the false-negative rate of SLNB was only 2% with tumors <4 cm and it was 7.4% with tumors ≥4 cm.[23] Today, SLNB is accepted as an alternative option to IFLND for lymphatic staging in T1b or T2 tumors.[15]
GROINSS-V II/GOG 270 trial investigated whether RT was a safe alternative for IFLND in vulvar cancer patients with a metastatic sentinel LN.[24,25] In this prospective multicenter Phase II trial, patients were included with early-stage SCC of the vulva (diameter <4 cm) without suspicious LNs at imaging, who had primary surgery with SLNB. In case of a metastatic sentinel LN in any size, 50 Gy conventionally fractionated RT was given to the groin(s). In case of a negative sentinel LN, patients were followed-up for ?2 years. From December 2005 to October 2016, 1552 eligible patients were registered. Sentinel LN metastasis was found in 21% (324/1552) of patients. After 54 months of inclusion, the trial was stopped due to increased risk of groin recurrence (2.1% vs. 20%) in case of sentinel LN >2 mm and/or with extracapsular extension (ECE).[25] The treatment protocol was amended with patients with micrometastasis (≤2 mm) in sentinel LN receiving RT from then on, and those with >2 mm in sentinel LN undergoing IFLND (with adjuvant RT in case of >1 LN and/or ECE). Isolated groin recurrences in patients with a sentinel LN micrometastasis (≤2 mm) decreased to 3.2% with this new treatment protocol and the combination of RT with SLNB was associated with minimal toxicity: 4.2% Grade 3 toxicity and no Grade 4 or 5 toxicity.[25] This study showed that RT to the groin is a safe alternative to IFLND with minimal toxicity in patients with micrometastasis in sentinel LNs. However, RT alone with a dose of 50 Gy is not sufficient for macrometastases. The ongoing GROINSS-V-III trial investigates the effectiveness and safety of chemoradiotherapy (CRT) (56 Gy to the involved site combined with weekly 40 mg/m2 cisplatin) in patients with macrometastases in sentinel LNs.
Adjuvant Treatment
Adjuvant RT is commonly used to reduce the risk of recurrences
in vulvar cancer patients with high-risk features.
The indications of adjuvant RT should be considered
for primary tumor site and lymphatics separately.
In patients with negative LNs, indication for primary
tumor site RT depends on the adverse primary tumor
risk factors. The most accepted primary tumor risk factor
for recurrence is positive or closes surgical margins.
[26,27] Ignatov et al.[27] observed that 5-year OS was
higher (67.6% vs. 29%) in patients with positive or close
(<1 cm) surgical margin who received adjuvant RT than
those who did not. Viswanathan et al.[26] also reported
that vulvar relapses increased in patients with positive
or close (<5 mm) surgical margins, and adjuvant RT
reduced local recurrences from 35% to 21% in those
patients. Two retrospective studies also reported that
none of the patients with surgical margin larger than 8
mm had a vulvar recurrence, but 21-48% of those with
a surgical margin less than 8 mm had local recurrences.
[28,29] Based on the retrospective series, RT has been
generally recommended for patients with <8 mm surgical
margins. However, the need for a minimal margin
of 8 mm was not confirmed in the AGO-CaRE database
and recent retrospective studies.[30-32] The definition
of close surgical margin remains unclear, but the cutoff
value of 8 mm for surgical margin is widely accepted.
Although, 5 mm surgical margin is accepted adequate
by some. All patients with close or positive surgical
margins initially should be evaluated for reexcision. In
cases whom surgery cannot be performed (tumor close
to urethra, clitoris, anal sphincter, etc.), RT should be
considered. The recent National Comprehensive Cancer
Network (NCCN) recommends adjuvant RT for patients
with positive or close surgical margins and accepts
5-8 mm as the definition of close surgical margin.[15]
The second important risk factor for the recommendation of adjuvant RT to primary tumor site is the depth of tumor invasion. Depth of invasion correlates not only with local recurrences but also with the risk of LN metastasis and subsequently survival rates.[33] There are several studies investigating the cutoff value for depth of invasion to predict recurrences.[6,34] Bogani et al.[34] showed increased rate of local recurrences in patients with a stromal invasion >2 mm than those with ≤2 mm. Zapardiel et al.[6] also found the stromal invasion of more than 5 mm as a poor prognostic factor for recurrence and OS. In the light of these findings, adjuvant RT for primary tumor site in patients with tumor thickness >5 mm is widely recommended.[15] Besides that, NCCN also recommends adjuvant RT to the primary tumor site for tumors with LVSI, large tumors (>4 cm), and diffuse/spray pattern of invasion, since several studies demonstrated these features as adverse risk factors for recurrence.[15,28,35]
LN involvement is one of the most important prognostic factors in vulvar cancer. Farias-Eisner et al.[36] reported that 5-year OS rates were 45% and 98% in patients with and without LN metastasis, respectively. Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) 37 trial compared pelvic LN dissection to pelvic RT after radical vulvectomy and IFLND in patients with pathologically positive inguinofemoral LNs.[37] Within 74 months of follow-up, patients receiving RT had improved 6-year OS rate (41% vs. 51%) and decreased 6-year cancerspecific death and groin recurrence rates (51% vs. 29% and 24% vs. 5%, respectively).[37] The subgroup of patients who got the most benefit with adjuvant RT was those with macrometastasis, ECE, or ≥2 LN metastases. Although adjuvant RT in patients with ≥2 LN metastases or ECE is not debatable, there are conflicting results in the literature regarding the role of adjuvant RT in patients with only one LN metastasis.[38-41] The AGO-CaRE-1 study was conducted to investigate the role of adjuvant RT in patients with positive LNs and adjuvant RT was administered in 41% of patients with LN metastasis[38] and revealed that adjuvant RT improved OS (57.7% vs. 51.4%) and progression-free survival (39.6% vs. 25.9%) in the whole cohort. However, this improvement was significant especially for patients with ≥2 positive LNs, without any significant survival benefit for patients with only one LN metastasis.[38] Van der Velden et al.[39] also recently supported omitting RT to the groin in patients with a single occult intracapsular LN metastasis due to the low risk of groin recurrence and the excellent groin recurrence- free survival without adjuvant RT. On the other hand, the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database analysis revealed that adjuvant RT statistically significantly improved survival, especially in patients with resected LNs less than 12 and single LN metastasis.[40] Of the 490 patients with Stage III, node-positive vulvar cancer in this SEER analysis had a single positive inguinal LN. The median number of LNs resected was 13 (range: 1-34). Patients who received adjuvant RT had a 5-year disease-specific survival of 77.0% compared to 61.2% in those without RT (P = 0.02). After stratifying the study group based on the extent of lymphadenectomy, 5-year survival rates with RT were 76.6% in patients with ≤12 LNs removed which was statistically significantly higher than those without RT in whom survival rate was 55.1%. In those with more than 12 nodes resected, RT increased the survival from 66.7% to 77.3%, though this difference was not statistically significant.[40] Serre et al.[41] also reported that 5-year OS rates were similar in patients with one intracapsular LN metastasis, one extracapsular LN metastasis, and two LN metastases, furthermore, they suggested adjuvant RT to patients with LN metastasis, irrespective of the number of involved LNs in case of LVSI.
There are no randomized data comparing adjuvant RT with CRT. Gill et al.[42] supported the addition of chemotherapy in adjuvant setting using the data from National Cancer Data Base (NCDB). Among 1797 vulvar cancer patients with positive LNs, 26.3% received adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to adjuvant RT and 76.6% had 1-3 involved LNs. Adjuvant chemotherapy increased OS (44 vs. 29.7 months) and reduced the risk of death (HR = 0.62; 95% CI, 0.48-0.79; P < 0.001).[42] Based on all these retrospective studies, adjuvant RT is strongly recommended for patients with LN metastasis in SLNB or IFLND and CRT is strongly recommended for patients with ≥2 positive LNs or a single LN with >2 mm metastasis after IFLND.[15] Based on limited experience, the most commonly used concurrent cytotoxic agent is weekly cisplatin with a dose of 40 mg/m2.[43]
Treatment of Locally Advanced-Stage Disease
(Stages III-IVA)
The locally advanced disease is defined as patients with
tumors extending to the adjacent structures (large [≥4
cm] T2 and all T3 tumors) or clinically positive groin
LNs (FIGO Stages III-IVA). In this phase, the disease is
considered unresectable or needs exenterative surgery
which leads to significant post-operative complications
and decreased quality of life. Thus, a multimodality
treatment has been explored to reduce surgery-related morbidity and improve organ preservation rates.[44]
RT is commonly used in locally advanced-stage disease
as neoadjuvant or definitive treatment.
Neoadjuvant Treatment
Neoadjuvant RT/CRT can be used in patients with
locally advanced-stage disease who are considered inoperable
or required extensive surgery to improve the
resectability rate and reduce the extent of the surgery.
Pre-operative RT in locally advanced disease was first
shown to result in tumor debulking and reduce the extent
of surgery in a landmark study by Boronow.[45]
In that particular study, 5-year OS rate was 75.6% and
pathologically complete response (CR) rate was 40%.
[45] There is no randomized study in the literature
comparing concurrent CRT with RT alone in locally
advanced vulvar cancer, however, concurrent weekly
cisplatin or 5-FU alone or in combination is commonly
used in locally advanced disease as a radiosensitizer
based on Phase III trials which showed the benefit of
CRT compared to RT alone in cervical and anal cancers.[46,47] In the GOG 101 study, 73 vulvar cancer
patients with unresectable T3-4 tumors received preoperative
47.6 Gy RT in 28 fractions to the pelvis and
the inguinofemoral LNs with concurrent cisplatin
and 5-FU.[48] The clinical and pathological CR rates
in that study were 48% and 31%, respectively. Only
2.8% of patients remained unresectable after CRT.[48]
Another GOG study which accrued 46 vulvar cancer
patients with unresectable N2-3 disease reported CR
rates of 41% in LNs after the same CRT protocol with
the GOG 101 trial.[49] In this study, local control rates
for LNs and primary tumor were 97% and 76%, respectively.
Although local control and resectability rates
were acceptable in these studies, a RT dose of 47.6 Gy
was not sufficient for macroscopic disease. Therefore,
GOG 205 trial investigated the effect of increasing RT
dose to 57.6 Gy in 32 fractions with concurrent weekly
cisplatin followed by surgery in patients with unresectable
T3-4 disease.[50] The authors reported that
69% of all patients completed the treatment and clinical
and pathological CR rates increased to 64% and
78%, respectively.[50]
Definitive Treatment
Based on studies evaluating the effectiveness of neoadjuvant
RT/CRT, high pathologic CR rates led to a growing
acceptance of omitting surgery in locally advanced
tumors in case of clinical CR. In the recent NCDB analysis,
2046 patients with locally advanced vulvar cancer
who were treated with either definitive RT/CRT or pre-operative RT/CRT were analyzed.[51] Within 21.9
months follow-up, 3-year OS was significantly higher
(57.1% vs. 41.7%) in pre-operative RT/CRT group than
primary RT/CRT group.[51] However, on multivariate
analysis, OS associated with primary RT/CRT with
doses more than 55 Gy was not significantly different
from RT/CRT and surgery, and the use of concurrent
chemotherapy improved OS of primary RT with doses
more than 55 Gy compared with CRT and surgery. The
results of an ongoing GOG 279 trial investigating the
role of definitive CRT (a dose of 64 Gy with concurrent
cisplatin and gemcitabine) in T2-3, N0-3 vulvar
cancer patients are pending. For patients with locally
advanced-stage disease who underwent neoadjuvant
or definitive RT/CRT, it is recommended to clinically
evaluate the patients and perform biopsy within the
first 3 months after completion of RT/CRT.[15] If the
patient has clinically and pathologically CR, observation
is the surveillance policy, but if there is a residual
tumor or LN metastasis, surgery or a boost dose of RT
should be considered.[15]
RT
Simulation
Computed tomography (CT) simulation is critical
for appropriate treatment planning in vulvar cancer.
A "frog leg" position in a vacuum-evacuated device
is generally preferred to spare the skin in the medial
thigh. Full bladder and empty rectum are preferred
during simulation and treatment to minimize the dose
to the small bowel. Internal target volume should be
generated in case of locally advanced disease, especially
when vagina, urethra, and/or anus are involved. Bolus
over the groin is not routinely recommended, but it
should be used for large, superficial LNs, or in case of
skin involvement.[43] If bolus is used, bolus should be
placed over scars with a margin of at least 3 cm. At the
time of simulation, patients should undergo scanning
both with and without bolus to avoid treatment interruption
in case that patients may develop a brisk skin
reaction and treatment can be continued without bolus
material.[43]
Target Volume Delineation
Recently, consensus guideline has been published for
target delineation and treatment planning in vulvar
cancer.[43] Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may
be useful for delineating the extent of the tumor in
definitive treatment. The GTV should encompass all gross lesions according to clinical examination and radiological
images. The entire vulva should be included
in the CTV, and CTV should be generated with a 1 cm
margin to GTV if GTV extends beyond the vulva. If
the primary tumor involves the vagina, 3 cm margins
to GTV should be included in the CTV and the entire
vaginal length should be included in the CTV in case of
any uncertainty about the proximal extent of the vaginal
extension. If the primary vulvar lesion involves the
anus, bladder, or urethra, gross disease plus at least 2
cm of anus, bladder, or urethra should be included in
the CTV. Satellite lesions, tumors with extensive LVSI,
or dermal lymphatic invasion should be included with
extra margins in the CTV. In post-operative settings,
CTV should cover the entire operative bed with a margin
of 2 cm. CTV to PTV margin should be 0.7-1.0 cm
depending on the patient stability procedure or the
treatment technique.
The GTV for LNs may be defined on either MRI or CT and encompasses all gross LNs. Nodal CTV should encompass nodal GTV. If the primary tumor involves the distal vagina, bilateral external iliac, internal iliac, obturator, and inguinofemoral LNs should be included in the nodal CTV. Presacral LNs should also be included in case of involvement of proximal half of the posterior vaginal wall. The inguinofemoral LNs are defined superiorly from where the external iliac artery leaves the bony pelvis to become the femoral artery. The inferior border is 2 cm below the saphenofemoral junction; however, another commonly used landmark is the level of the lesser trochanter. The ideal perivascular or radial margin (a margin that incorporates the location of all potential inguinal LNs) is not known. Based on a recent study, anteromedial ≥35 mm, anterior ≥23 mm, anterolateral ≥25 mm, and medial ≥22 mm margins to inguinofemoral vessels are recommended to obtain nodal CTV.[52] LN recurrence is not seen posterior or lateral to femoral vessels, thus addition of margins to the vessels in those regions is not recommended. Furthermore, if extensive lymphadenopathy or ECE is noted, covering the entire operative bed should be considered.
RT Dose
Dose recommendations are mainly based on these consensus
guideline and GOG 205 trial protocol.[15,43,50]
Definitive CRT is the standard treatment in locally advanced
vulvar cancer. A boost dose should be given in
the gross disease at the primary site to improve local
control and the recommended dose range is 60 Gy-
>70 Gy. In post-operative cases, a minimum equivalent dose of 45-50 Gy is recommended for clear margins and
54-60 Gy for close or positive margins. Viswanathan et
al.[26] demonstrated an increase of vulvar recurrence
rate in vulvar cancer patients with close or positive surgical
margin and a minimum dose of 56 Gy decreased
recurrence rate from 35% to 21% in patients with 0-5
mm of surgical margin. A NCDB data evaluating 3075
vulvar cancer patients with positive surgical margin
also reported the best survival rate with 54-59.9 Gy.[53]
A similar approach is applied for LNs and clinically
and/or radiographically uninvolved inguinofemoral
LNs should be treated to a "microscopic dose" of 45-
50 Gy. Positive inguinofemoral LNs without ECE after
IFLND should be treated to a dose of 50-55 Gy, and 54-
64 Gy is recommended for LNs with ECE. Minimum
of 60-70 Gy should be delivered to inguinofemoral LNs
for gross residual or unresectable disease. Dose recommendations
and dose constraints for organs at risk are
detailed in Tables 1 and 2, respectively.
Table 1: Radiotherapy dose recommendations for vulvar cancer
Table 2: Radiotherapy dose constraints for organs at risk
RT Technique
RT has a major role in the curative treatment of vulvar
cancer. Intensity-modulated RT (IMRT) provides
increased tumor control and reduces normal tissue
complications.[54] Beriwal et al.[55] comparing threedimensional
conformal RT (3DCRT) plans with IMRT plans in 15 vulvar cancer patients demonstrated that
mean bowel, bladder, and rectum doses were significantly
lower with IMRT plans. A few studies investigating
the role of CRT in the treatment of vulvar cancer
used IMRT as a RT technique and reported that
IMRT with concurrent chemotherapy is well tolerated,
with good pathologic response rates and clinical outcomes.[56-58] Bloemers et al.[59] comparing 3DCRT,
sequential IMRT, IMRT with simultaneous integrated
boost (SIB), and IMRT with dose-escalated (increased)
SIB also reported that all IMRT techniques have lower
mean doses in organs at risk than 3DCRT techniques
without compromising the dosimetric coverage of the
target. The results of the ongoing GOG 279 trial using
the IMRT technique are pending. Based on these
findings in the literature, IMRT is recommended for
the treatment of vulvar cancer. The definitive treatment
planning belongs to a patient with Stage IB vulvar cancer
is shown in Figure 1.
Conclusion
The primary aim of the treatment of vulvar cancer is to obtain the best oncological outcomes with the least morbidity. Based on large retrospective and limited number of prospective studies, surgery is preferred treatment option for early-stage vulvar cancer and concurrent CRT is the standard treatment for locally advanced disease. Advances in RT technology and improvements in systemic treatments also show promise in the treatment of vulvar cancers. However, because of their rarity, multicentric studies should be designed.Peer-review: Externally peer-reviewed.
Conflict of Interest: I have no conflict of interest.
Financial Support: I have no financial support.
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