Association between Regular Vaginal Dilation and/or Sexual Activity and Long-Term Vaginal Morbidity in Cervical Cancer Survivors.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2023;
117:S2-S3. [PMID:
37784450 DOI:
10.1016/j.ijrobp.2023.06.207]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/04/2023]
Abstract
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE(S)
To evaluate the association between regular vaginal dilation and/or sexual activity and vaginal morbidity in locally advanced cervical cancer patients after definitive radiochemotherapy and image-guided adaptive brachytherapy from the EMBRACE I study.
MATERIALS/METHODS
Physician-assessed vaginal morbidity (CTCAE v.3), vaginal dilation and patient-reported sexual activity (EORTC QLQ CX24) were assessed at baseline, every 3 months in the 1st year, every 6 months in the 2nd and 3rd year and yearly thereafter. For this longitudinal analysis, a subgroup of patients was selected with at least 3 follow-ups with information on vaginal dilation and/or sexual activity. Vaginal penetration summarized either the use of vaginal dilators or sexual activity or both. Regular vaginal penetration was defined if reported in ≥50%, infrequent if reported in <50% and absent if reported in 0% of follow-ups. Actuarial estimates of vaginal morbidity were calculated with Kaplan-Meier method and included the individual symptoms: vaginal dryness, stenosis, mucositis and bleeding. Group comparisons were evaluated with the log-rank test.
RESULTS
The EMBRACE I study included 1416 patients overall (2008-2015); the subgroup of patients for this longitudinal evaluation consists of 882 patients, with a median follow-up of 60 months (IQR 47-77). Of those, 565 (64%) reported regular, 205 (23%) infrequent and 112 (13%) no penetration. Reporting regular penetration was associated with a significantly lower risk of vaginal stenosis G≥2 of 23% at 5 years, compared to reporting of infrequent (37%) and no penetration (36%, p≤0.001). However, reporting regular penetration was associated with a significantly higher risk for vaginal dryness G≥1 (72% vs. 69% vs. 62%, respectively, p = 0.038) and bleeding G≥1 (61% vs. 40% vs. 25%, respectively, p≤0.001). No associations were seen for G≥1 vaginal stenosis, G≥2 dryness, G≥2 bleeding and G≥1/G≥2 mucositis.
CONCLUSION
Regular penetration (defined as vaginal dilation and/or sexual activity) was associated with lower risk for vaginal stenosis G≥2, but higher risk for vaginal dryness G≥1 and bleeding G≥1. Mild vaginal dryness seems to become apparent in particular for patients experiencing vaginal penetration. Minor vaginal blood loss during dilation and/or sexual activity is commonly reported by patients, resulting from atrophy of the vaginal mucosa and/or telangiectasia. While both of these G≥1 symptoms can be managed with lubricants, moisturizer and/or hormonal replacement therapy, G≥2 vaginal stenosis represents an irreversible fibrotic adverse event that can cause dyspareunia in many cancer patients. These long-term data support clinical recommendations for dilation and/or sexual activity after radiotherapy.
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