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1 sie 2023 · VIN 3 is almost always treated surgically. The most common surgery to treat VIN 3 is called a vulvectomy. It removes all or part of the vulva to treat conditions that affect it.
4 mar 2014 · Twenty‐eight women with VIN 3 lesions were treated with both CO2 laser and LEEP, applied to half of each VIN lesion. A randomisation procedure was used to assign one of the two sides to LEEP or CO2 laser. A complete response was observed in 12/25 women after a single treatment.
When occult invasion is not a concern, vulvar HSIL (VIN usual type) can be treated with excision, laser ablation, or topical imiquimod (off-label use). Women with vulvar HSIL (VIN usual type) are at risk of recurrent disease and vulvar cancer throughout their lifetimes.
7 maj 2022 · We report results from the first randomised trial comparing imiquimod with surgery for human papillomavirus (HPV)-related VIN or vulvar high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (vHSIL). We found that per-protocol treatment with imiquimod resulted in a complete clinical response rate of 80% at 6 months, compared with 79% after one surgical ...
1 lis 2020 · Surgical treatment of vH-SIL According to the 2016 recommendations for the management of vH-SIL published by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology, vH-SIL can be treated with surgical excision, laser ablation, or topical imiquimod when there are no signs of ...
Study design: Thirty-nine cases of VIN 3, 15 cases of VIN 2 and 9 of VIN 1, for a total of 63 patients with histologically proven VIN, underwent laser excision or vaporization under colposcopic guidance, using local anesthesia, in an outpatient setting or after day-surgery admission.
The primary treatment for vulvar cancer is surgery. Radiation therapy is also given to patients with stage III or IV disease. [1 - 3] Newer strategies have integrated surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy and tailor the treatment to the extent of clinical and pathological disease.