Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
The objective of this study was to assess the clinical outcome of patients with recurrent early-stage ovarian cancer.
METHODS:
The hospital records of 87 patients were reviewed. The median follow-up of survivors from recurrence was 87.6 months.
RESULTS:
The
25%, 50%, and 75% quantiles of time to recurrence were 15, 25, and 44
months, respectively. The pelvis was the most common site of failure
(39.1%), followed by abdomen (18.3%) and retroperitoneal nodes (18.3%).
Treatment at recurrence consisted of chemotherapy in 46 patients,
surgery plus chemotherapy in 29, surgery in 3, surgery plus radiotherapy
in 2, and other therapies in 7. A macroscopically complete
cytoreduction was obtained in 29 (85.2%) of the 34 patients who
underwent secondary surgery. Five- and 7-year survival rates after
recurrence were 34.3% and 29.6%. By log-rank test, survival after
recurrence was related to patient age (≤60 vs >60 years; P = 0.001),
time to recurrence (>15 vs ≤15 months; P = 0.049), site of recurrence
(retroperitoneum vs pelvis vs other; P = 0.004), and surgery at
recurrence (yes vs not; P = 0.001), but not to substage, histotype,
grade, prior adjuvant chemotherapy, examination that detected
recurrence, and chemotherapy at recurrence. On multivariate analysis,
patient age (hazard ratio, 1.836; 95% confidence interval, 1.060-3.180)
and surgical treatment at recurrence (hazard ratio, 1.972; 95%
confidence interval, 1.084-3.587) were independent prognostic variables
for survival after recurrence.
CONCLUSIONS:
Patient age
and surgery at recurrence were independent prognostic variables for
patients with recurrent early-stage ovarian cancer. When feasible,
salvage surgery appears to give a survival advantage in this clinical
setting.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.