Sexual dysfunctions and vaginal stenosis in women after radiotherapy for gynecological cancer.

Fretta T1, Bergmann A2, Homsi Jorge C1, Dias M3

Research Type

Clinical

Abstract Category

Rehabilitation

Abstract 455
Open Discussion ePosters
Scientific Open Discussion Session 102
Thursday 18th September 2025
13:05 - 13:10 (ePoster Station 6)
Exhibition
Rehabilitation Pelvic Floor Female
1. Ribeirão Preto Medical School, 2. National Cancer Institute, 3. Oncology Research Center
Presenter
Links

Abstract

Hypothesis / aims of study
The aim of this study was to analyze the risk factors for vaginal stenosis in women after six months of radiotherapy treatment for gynecological pelvic cancer.
Study design, materials and methods
This is a cross-sectional study, approved by the Ethics and Research Committee. Women who agreed to participate in the study signed an informed consent form.
The study population consisted of 113 women who underwent radiotherapy for the treatment of gynecological pelvic cancer and who were assessed in the physiotherapy service six months after the end of radiotherapy. Women who had already undergone radiotherapy for other types of neoplasms and who had difficulty understanding the questions or had cognitive impairment were not included.
Data collection personal data, sociodemographic variables (age, city, lifestyle), type of gynecological cancer, use of vaginal dilators, frequency and data related to self-reported sexual activity were collected and considered as a dichotomous variable. The diagnosis of vaginal stenosis was based on the Common Criteria for Adverse Events Version (CTCAE v4.03).
The Chi square test was used to analyse the association between sexual activity and vaginal stenosis. Statistical analysis was performed on a frequency basis for clinical and lifestyle variables. Multiple logistic regression were used to adjust for confounding variables
Results
In total, 113 women with a mean age of 52.4±13.6 years were included in this study. Among them, 72% had a partner, 81% had a job and 88% low-income. Among the lifestyle habits, 7% were smokers and 34% were ex-smokers, 50% were sexually active with frequency of 2.7±2.2 times a week. The most prevalent gynecological pelvic cancer was cervical cancer 73%, and stading I-II 62%. In relation to treatment, 63% did not had surgery, 78% underwent chemo, 90% tele, 100% brachytherapy, and 78% underwent 28GY dose. 
Table 1 shows the variables of clinical treatment, whether the women were sexually active or not, use of vaginal dilators and frequency, and CTCAE.
Women without vaginal stenosis were more likely to be sexually active (OR=5.20, CI95% 12.59; 2.15; p=0.001).
Other factors associated with vaginal stenosis: not being sexually active increases the chance of developing vaginal stenosis (OR=3.97; CI 95% 9.08; 1.73 p=0.001). Not using vaginal dilators increases the chance of developing vaginal stenosis (OR=3.52; CI 95% 8.04; 1.54; p=0.003).
Interpretation of results
Women who did not use vaginal dilators and were not sexually active were more likely to develop vaginal stenosis, while women without vaginal stenosis were more likely to be sexually active.
Concluding message
The results of this study shows how vaginal stenosis after treatment of gynecologic pelvic cancer can impact women´s sexual activity. High quality randomized controlled trials are urgently needed  to investigate the impact of specific programs focused on the use of vaginal dilators, as well as sexual education to prevent and to reduce the impact of vaginal stenosis post-pelvic cancer treatment.
Figure 1
References
  1. Matos SRL, Lucas Rocha Cunha M, Podgaec S, Weltman E, Yamazaki Centrone AF, Cintra Nunes Mafra AC. Consensus for vaginal stenosis prevention in patients submitted to pelvic radiotherapy. PLoS One. 2019 Aug 9;14(8):e0221054. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221054. PMID: 31398239; PMCID: PMC6688793.
  2. Cyr MP, Dostie R, Camden C, Dumoulin C, Bessette P, Pina A, Gotlieb WH, Lapointe-Milot K, Mayrand MH, Morin M. Improvements following multimodal pelvic floor physical therapy in gynecological cancer survivors suffering from pain during sexual intercourse: Results from a one-year follow-up mixed-method study. PLoS One. 2022 Jan 25;17(1):e0262844. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0262844. PMID: 35077479; PMCID: PMC8789131.
  3. Damast S, Jeffery DD, Son CH, Hasan Y, Carter J, Lindau ST, Jhingran A. Literature Review of Vaginal Stenosis and Dilator Use in Radiation Oncology. Pract Radiat Oncol. 2019 Nov;9(6):479-491. doi: 10.1016/j.prro.2019.07.001. Epub 2019 Jul 11. PMID: 31302301; PMCID: PMC7944435.
Disclosures
Funding CAPES 001 Clinical Trial No Subjects Human Ethics Committee Ethics and Research Committee of the Oncology Research Center (CEPON) N° 3,621,243. Helsinki Yes Informed Consent Yes
09/07/2025 19:32:17