Vulvar cancer is a surgically staged disease. Treatment typically occurs via this staging procedure and information gained from the procedure helps guide future treatments. The most important predictor of survival is lymph node status, which is determined during the initial surgical procedure.
Other factors important to overall outcome are:
In early stage tumors of small size (‹2 centimeters) and minimal invasion (‹1 millimeter), the risk of lymph node metastasis is so small that groin nodal dissection can be safely omitted. In all other cases, groin nodal dissections are important to not only predict overall survival but guide post-operative radiotherapy.
In patients that undergo lymph node dissection, 25% of patients with suspicious nodes will be negative for disease, while 25% with non-suspicious nodes will be found to have tumor tissue within the dissected groin nodes. This further reinforces the need for thorough surgical staging in more advanced stages of vulvar cancer.