@article {Pedra Nobre1162, author = {Silvana Pedra Nobre and Jennifer J. Mueller and Ginger J. Gardner and Kara Long Roche and Carol L Brown and Robert A Soslow and Kaled M. Alektiar and Yukio Sonoda and Vance A. Broach and Elizabeth L. Jewell and Oliver Zivanovic and Dennis S Chi and Nadeem R Abu-Rustum and Mario M. Leitao, Jr.}, title = {Comparison of minimally invasive versus open surgery in the treatment of endometrial carcinosarcoma}, volume = {30}, number = {8}, pages = {1162--1168}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1136/ijgc-2020-001573}, publisher = {BMJ Specialist Journals}, abstract = {Objective The aim of this study was to compare perioperative and oncologic outcomes between minimally invasive and open surgery in the treatment of endometrial carcinosarcoma.Methods We retrospectively identified all patients with newly diagnosed endometrial carcinosarcoma who underwent primary surgery via any approach at our institution from January 2009 to January 2018. Patients with known bulky disease identified on preoperative imaging were excluded. The χ2 and Mann{\textendash}Whitney U tests were used to compare categorical and continuous variables, respectively. Kaplan{\textendash}Meier curves were used to estimate survival, and compared using the log rank test.Results We identified 147 eligible patients, of whom 37 (25\%) underwent an open approach and 110 (75\%) underwent minimally invasive surgery. Within the minimally invasive group, 92 (84\%) of 110 patients underwent a robotic procedure and 14 (13\%) underwent a laparoscopic procedure. Four minimally invasive cases (4\%) were converted to open procedures. Median age, body mass index, operative time, stage, complication grade, and use of adjuvant treatment were clinically and statistically similar between groups. Median length of hospital stay in the open group was 4 days (range 3{\textendash}21) compared with 1 day (range 0{\textendash}6) in the minimally invasive group (p\<0.001). The rates of any 30-day complication were 46\% in the open and 8\% in the minimally invasive group (p\<0.001). The rates of grade 3 or higher complications were 5.4\% and 1.8\%, respectively (p=0.53). Median follow-up for the entire cohort was 30 months (range 0.4{\textendash}121). Two-year progression-free survival rates were 52.8\% (SE{\textpm}8.4) in the open group and 58.5\% (SE{\textpm}5.1) in the minimally invasive group (p=0.7). Two-year disease-specific survival rates were 66.1\% (SE{\textpm}8.0) and 81.4\% (SE{\textpm}4.1), respectively (p=0.8).Conclusions In patients with clinical stage I endometrial carcinosarcoma, minimally invasive compared with open surgery was not associated with poor oncologic outcomes, but with a shorter length of hospital stay and a lower rate of overall complications.}, issn = {1048-891X}, URL = {https://ijgc.bmj.com/content/30/8/1162}, eprint = {https://ijgc.bmj.com/content/30/8/1162.full.pdf}, journal = {International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer} }