Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: Elderly patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer
present a complex treatment dilemma. On the one hand, patients can be
treated with primary debulking surgery to achieve the ideal oncologic
outcomes but at the expense of risk of surgical morbidity and mortality.
On the other hand, they can be treated with alternative, less morbid
approaches, reducing toxicity, but sacrificing the survival benefits of
low residual disease by surgical cytoreduction. Retrospective studies
have attempted to identify risk factors for poor surgical outcome.
Although there is no consensus to define "elderly" or "frail," current
evidence identifies age, performance status, nutritional status, and
surgical complexity as major risk factors for surgical morbidity.
Accepting the shortcomings of these retrospective data, candidates for
primary debulking surgery can be assessed for risk of surgical
morbidity. Age is likely a contributor to morbidity, particularly in the
face of comorbid conditions. Clinicians should strive to treat elderly
patients with a standard approach of primary debulking surgery and
adjuvant chemotherapy when healthy and in the absence of other risk
factors. Elderly patients with the following are poor surgical
candidates and an alternative treatment approach should be considered:
poor nutritional status (characterized by serum albumin <3.0 g/dL),
or poor performance status (ASA ≥3), and stage IV disease. Several of
these factors are modifiable by treating the underlying cancer.
These patients should be treated with two to three cycles of
neoadjuvant chemotherapy and reassessed for surgical debulking. Patients
with improvement in their nutritional or performance status can undergo
interval debulking with the goal to resect all visible disease.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.