4.5 Article

Preoperative Haematologic Markers for the Differentiation of Endometrial Cancer from Benign Endometrial Lesions in Postmenopausal Patients with Endometrial Masses

Journal

CANCER MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages 1111-1121

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S430013

Keywords

endometrial cancer; differentiation; hematologic parameters; combination markers

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This study aimed to assess the role of preoperative hematologic parameters in differentiating malignant and benign endometrial lesions. The results showed that certain hematologic markers independently predicted the presence of endometrial malignancy, and the combination markers MPV+PDW+NLR had good discriminatory power.
Purpose: The diagnostic value of preoperative hematological changes in endometrial cancer (EC) remains unclear. This study aimed to assess the role of preoperative hematologic parameters in differentiating EC from benign endometrial lesions in postmenopausal women with endometrial masses.Methods: Preoperative laboratory variables were retrospectively reviewed in patients with malignant or benign endometrial lesions, and the significance of intergroup differences was assessed. Receiver operating characteristic curves were used to analyze the optimal cut-off values for each variable. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify the variables predicting the presence of endometrial malignancy.Results: Preoperative laboratory variables of 176 patients (84 EC and 92 benign lesions) with endometrial masses were analyzed. Significant differences were observed between malignant and benign lesions in terms of WBC count, ANC, MCV, MPV, PDW, CA125, NLR, PMR, LMR, and SII (P < 0.05). Multivariate analyses showed that a high WBC count, high ANC, low MCV, low MPV, low PDW, high CA125, high NLR, high PMR, high LMR, and high SII independently predicted the presence of endometrial malignancy.Conclusion: The combination markers, MPV+PDW+NLR, had good discriminatory power for the presence of malignancy (AUC 0.797). Our results suggest that hematologic markers could be useful for the differentiation of malignant and benign endometrial lesions.

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