Cervical cancer (staging)

Last revised by Bahman Rasuli on 8 May 2024

Staging of cervical cancer can either be based on the TNM or FIGO system.

Classification

Revised FIGO staging of cervical carcinoma (2018)
  • FIGO no longer includes stage 0 (Tis)
  • I: confined to cervix uteri (extension to the corpus should be disregarded)
    • IA: invasive carcinoma only diagnosed by microscopy
      • IA1: stromal invasion <3 mm in depth
      • IA2: stromal invasion ≥3 mm and <5 mm in depth
    • IB: invasive carcinoma with measured deepest invasion ≥5 mm (greater than stage IA), lesion limited to the cervix uteri
      • IB1: invasive carcinoma ≥5 mm depth of stromal invasion and <2 cm in greatest dimension
      • IB2: invasive carcinoma ≥2 cm and <4 cm in greatest dimension
      • IB3: invasive carcinoma ≥4 cm in greatest dimension
  • II: beyond the uterus, but has not extended onto the lower third of the vagina or to the pelvic wall
    • IIA: involvement limited to the upper 2/3 of vagina without parametrial invasion
      • IIA1: invasive carcinoma <4 cm in greatest dimension
      • IIA2: invasive carcinoma ≥4 cm in greatest dimension
    • IIB: with parametrial involvement but not up to the pelvic wall
  • III: carcinoma involves the lower third of the vagina and/or extends to the pelvic wall and/or causes hydronephrosis or non‐functioning kidney and/or involves pelvic and/or paraaortic lymph nodes
    • IIIA: carcinoma involves the lower third of the vagina, with no extension to the pelvic wall
    • IIIB: extension to the pelvic wall and/or hydronephrosis or non‐functioning kidney (unless known to be due to another cause)
    • IIIC: involvement of pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph nodes, irrespective of tumor size and extent
      • IIIC1: pelvic lymph node metastasis only
      • IIIC2: para-aortic lymph node metastasis
      • with r (imaging) and p (pathology) notations to indicate how lymph nodes were identified
  • IV: carcinoma has extended beyond the true pelvis or has involved (biopsy-proven) the mucosa of the bladder or rectum (bullous edema, as such, does not permit a case to be allotted to stage IV)
    • IVA: spread to adjacent organs
    • IVB: spread to distant organs 8
TNM Staging 2021 (AJCC version 9)
Primary tumor (T)
  • Tx: primary tumor cannot be assessed
  • T0: no evidence of primary tumor
  • Tis: carcinoma in situ (cis)
  • T1: cervical carcinoma confined to the uterus  (extension to the corpus should be disregarded)
    • T1a: invasive carcinoma diagnosed only by microscopy (depth of invasion < 5 mm)11
    • T1b: clinically visible lesion confined to the cervix
  • T2: cervical carcinoma invades beyond uterus but not to pelvic wall or to lower third of vagina
    • T2a: tumor without parametrial invasion
    • T2b: tumor with parametrial invasion
  • T3: tumor extends to pelvic wall and/or involves lower third of vagina, and/or causes hydronephrosis
    • T3a: tumor involves lower third of vagina, no extension to pelvic wall
    • T3b: tumor extends to pelvic wall and/or causes hydronephrosis or nonfunctioning kidney (unless known to be due to another cause)
  • T4: tumor invades the mucosa of bladder or rectum, and/or extends beyond true pelvis 11
Regional lymph nodes (N)
  • Nx: regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed
  • N0: no regional lymph nodes metastasis
  • N1: regional lymph node metastases to pelvic lymph nodes only
  • N2: regional lymph node metastasis to para-aortic lymph nodes, with or without positive pelvic lymph nodes 11
Distant metastasis (M)
  • M0: no distant metastasis
  • M1: distant metastasis (includes metastasis to inguinal lymph nodes, intraperitoneal disease, lung, liver, or bone; excludes metastasis to pelvic or para-aortic lymph nodes or vagina) 11

See also

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