Two decades ago, Professor Michael Höckel, then Director of the Department of Gynaecology at Leipzig University, developed a new surgical method for the treatment of cervical cancer patients: total mesometrial resection (TMMR).
The method is based on the ontogenetic cancer field model, which predicts the local spreading pattern of a malignant tumour from the embryonic development of its original tissue.
During the operation, tissue structures with a high risk of cancer – which are often left behind during conventional surgery – are removed.
On the other hand, other structures that are important for the function of neighbouring organs, such as the urinary bladder, are spared despite their proximity to the tumour.
Found in the journal, EClinicalMedicine.
While conventional surgery requires subsequent radiotherapy in up to half of all cases, TMMR does not require this at all.
The recently published study is the first to directly compare the Leipzig surgical method with the conventional treatment strategy.
Professor Bahriye Aktas, Director of the Department of Gynaecology at the University of Leipzig Medical Center and Professor Henrik Falconer from Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm and their teams analysed 1007 women with cervical cancer who were treated between 2011 and 2020.
Advanced statistical methods were used to directly compare the data from the University of Leipzig Medical Center with that from Sweden, where the standard treatment is surgery and radiotherapy.
While 91.2 per cent of women with early-stage cervical cancer treated with TMMR continued to be tumour-free after five years, this was only the case for 81.8 per cent of women who received conventional treatment. In the Leipzig cohort, the risk of dying from cervical cancer during the period studied was 58 per cent lower.
“The findings confirm that our team in Leipzig is on the right track with cancer field surgery. The data now available will contribute further to the national and international dissemination of the principle and practice of cancer surgery developed in Leipzig and cure more patients with cervical carcinoma, but also with other gynaecological cancers,” says Professor Aktas.
Source: Universität Leipzig
We are an independent charity and are not backed by a large company or society. We raise every penny ourselves to improve the standards of cancer care through education. You can help us continue our work to address inequalities in cancer care by making a donation.
Any donation, however small, contributes directly towards the costs of creating and sharing free oncology education.
Together we can get better outcomes for patients by tackling global inequalities in access to the results of cancer research.
Thank you for your support.